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<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00038717_0001"/>
The Freshman Talent Show scheduled for<lb/>
tomorrow, Septemper 29, has been canceled.<lb/>
Easttarolinian<lb/>
The North Cafeteria ?it be open Sunday<lb/>
night from 5:15-6:16 p.m.<lb/>
Volume XXXVII<lb/>
East Carolina College<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1961<lb/>
V<lb/>
-<lb/>
,v<lb/>
Concert Features Ferg<lb/>
Number 3<lb/>
Pre-Game Festivities<lb/>
ToH<lb/>
onor<lb/>
ECAI<lb/>
umni<lb/>
ins, announcement of a new Chief<lb/>
Buccaneer, and a program by college<lb/>
musicians.<lb/>
Jayne Chandler, co-chairman of<lb/>
Homecoming, has emphasized the im-<lb/>
portance of voting for the Homecom-<lb/>
ing Queen. This voting will take place<lb/>
on Tuesday, October 3, in the down-<lb/>
stairs of the College Union.<lb/>
Sponsors<lb/>
Jayne also reminds the sponsors<lb/>
that they are responsible for their<lb/>
own automobile, and that their cos-<lb/>
tumes are the colonial type dress,<lb/>
complete with parasol, and large hat.<lb/>
'lie parade will form no later than<lb/>
() on Saturday morning.<lb/>
"The deadline for submitting the<lb/>
theme of the floats and sponsors'<lb/>
names was yesterday, but for those<lb/>
who neglected to hand them in to the<lb/>
SGA Office, the deadline is extended<lb/>
until Friday, but no later said Jayne.<lb/>
"We need the list in order to arrange<lb/>
the parade formation<lb/>
- 9l A To Sell Entertainment Tickets<lb/>
enate Passes Recommended Budget<lb/>
tin<lb/>
m<lb/>
n,<lb/>
wii<lb/>
an<lb/>
me<lb/>
Sm<lb/>
e'er<lb/>
tm<lb/>
eh<lb/>
dt<lb/>
led budget for the<lb/>
?  submitted by<lb/>
wttee, was passed by<lb/>
?vernment Association<lb/>
. SGA Treasurer, ex-<lb/>
? d apfxropria-<lb/>
ted to .Slu9.577.78. and<lb/>
? i ted income for the<lb/>
. lei t activity fees,<lb/>
? :  -ln.t.noo. From this<lb/>
? only 90 of the total<lb/>
iated a: this<lb/>
ar, hut due to excess-<lb/>
total, plus funds on<lb/>
been a: propriated.<lb/>
I Budget, age 5).<lb/>
GA ted to appropriate<lb/>
Series, which<lb/>
place of the Danforth<lb/>
. since sufficient funds<lb/>
ed. Educational, Fine Arts,<lb/>
ties programs are be-<lb/>
Kntertainmt-nt Tickls<lb/>
Ma lison, representing the<lb/>
Committee, reeom-<lb/>
? purchase price for tick-<lb/>
? Fine Asta Entertainment<lb/>
entertainment for<lb/>
1 stxtdente, and $2.50, per<lb/>
? ' t, for adults, including<lb/>
hers. Seasonal tickets are<lb/>
?12.00, but the faculty,<lb/>
arried students may pur-<lb/>
ial ticket for the re-<lb/>
One hundred tick-<lb/>
ale before each popu-<lb/>
nt. F?r the Popular<lb/>
a seasonal tickets will not be<lb/>
By MARCELLE VOGEL<lb/>
been placed in savings.<lb/>
oti Strother, SGA President, an-<lb/>
nounced that Georgia Hooks has been<lb/>
appointed as Publicity Chairman of<lb/>
the SGA. This appointement was ap-<lb/>
I roved by the student senate.<lb/>
Buttons. Hats, and Confederate Flags<lb/>
Jayne (handler, co-chairman of<lb/>
Homecoming, announced that the<lb/>
?'Circle K" Club will be selling but-<lb/>
tons, hats, and confederate flags for<lb/>
Homecoming. All proceeds will go to-<lb/>
ward the new stadium.<lb/>
Harris To Star In Playhouse<lb/>
Production Of 'Robin Hood'<lb/>
inplimentery tickets will be giv-<lb/>
the House Mothers, and the<lb/>
kternity House Mothers; Dr. Tuck-<lb/>
Dr. Holt, and President Jenkins;<lb/>
a minimum amount of tickets will<lb/>
nvf n to the local press in return<lb/>
free publicity. This recommenda-<lb/>
was paisd by the SGA.<lb/>
Ln additional $500.00 was approved<lb/>
the SGA to l added to the emerg-<lb/>
loan fund for students. An<lb/>
-gency loan of $25.00 may be bor-<lb/>
d by any student, for Q thirty<lb/>
period, interest free. This ad-<lb/>
nal $.500.00 is from interest de-<lb/>
from SGA funds, which have<lb/>
The East Carolina College Play-<lb/>
i ouse has announced the cast and the<lb/>
i faction of a sorios of performances<lb/>
during October of the children's play<lb/>
"Robin Hood" by James Norris.<lb/>
Tise production will be one of the<lb/>
nual pliys for Pitt County school<lb/>
children which have been produced<lb/>
by the Playhouse and sponsored by<lb/>
the Greenville Branch of the Ameri-<lb/>
,i Association of University Women<lb/>
since 1941.<lb/>
A performance for college stu-<lb/>
dents nn adults is scheduled for Oc-<lb/>
U ' r 20 in the McGinnis auditorium<lb/>
at 8 p.m. A tour of schools in Pitt<lb/>
County is now being arranged by<lb/>
Dr. Kathleen Dunlop uf the college<lb/>
;i;y. representing the AAUW. A<lb/>
schedule of (performances will be an-<lb/>
nounced at an early date.<lb/>
Thomas Hull, a senior with several<lb/>
years of experience in the Playhouse<lb/>
i nd also during military service in<lb/>
Germany in 1958-1960. is director of<lb/>
"Robin Hood Dr. Ralph Hardee<lb/>
R ves, assistant director of the dra-<lb/>
matic club, acts as production super-<lb/>
vise<lb/>
Denard Harris, heads the cast as<lb/>
the adventurous Robin Hood. Maid<lb/>
Marian, his sweetheart, is (played by<lb/>
Sue Little. John F. Parkerd, as the<lb/>
villian of the play, has the part of<lb/>
the Sheriff of Nottingham.<lb/>
Scheduled to appear as members<lb/>
of Robin Hood's outlaw band are<lb/>
Michael Lewis as the genial Friar<lb/>
Tuck; Robert Christensen, as Little<lb/>
John; and Jerry Higgins as Will<lb/>
Scarlett.<lb/>
Others in the cast include Eloise<lb/>
Hewitt, D. Ross Thomas, Howard I<lb/>
Mallard, John McPherson, Maria<lb/>
liaenlel, Loretta Foster. William<lb/>
KWkley, M. Ronald Helms, Joe P.<lb/>
Brantton, and Jerry Winberry.<lb/>
Assisting Director Hull are Mr.<lb/>
Rackley, technical director, and Bob<lb/>
mamura, lighting director. In charge<lb/>
o! other asipeets of production are<lb/>
Shirley J. Morse, make-up, Edward<lb/>
Smith, stage manager; Mary Jane<lb/>
.ddlugh, properties manager; and<lb/>
( barles G. Lancaster, Jr publicity<lb/>
director.<lb/>
Costumes for "Robin Hood" are<lb/>
1 ing designed by Mrs. Lois Garren<lb/>
whose original costumes for "Mid-<lb/>
si.miner Night's Dream "Antigone<lb/>
and other plays were outstanding<lb/>
attractions of the Playhouse produc-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
By MARCELLE VOGEL<lb/>
Our 1961-1962 Annual Homecoming Weekend will feature as its guest<lb/>
artist the youngest bandleader in the country, Maynard Ferguson and his<lb/>
twelve-piece band, on Saturday night, October 9, in Wright Auditorium<lb/>
? omvdered by many jazz authorities to be the outstanding trumpeter in<lb/>
modern music in terms of presence, bone in the upper register and absolute<lb/>
command of pitch and volume, Ferguson's virtuosity on tramp has brought<lb/>
him more and more attention.<lb/>
A consistent poll winner, he was ?<lb/>
oted favorite truirmpeter of Down<lb/>
Beat readers in 1950, 1951, and 1952,<lb/>
when he was with Stan Kenton as<lb/>
featured soloist. His band was select-<lb/>
ed as New Star Band jn the 1959<lb/>
Down Beat International Jazz Critics<lb/>
Joll, and placed second only to Basie<lb/>
in the jazz band category of Down<lb/>
Beat Readers Poll of 1959.<lb/>
Other noted personalities who will<lb/>
be on campus for the Homecoming<lb/>
festivities include "Rock and Roll"<lb/>
singer, Chuck Jackson and hLs group,<lb/>
which will appear on a concert on<lb/>
Friday. October 6, from 4:00-6:00<lb/>
?.m. in Wright Auditorium; and the<lb/>
opulai singing group "The High-<lb/>
way men The latter group will ap-<lb/>
pear -m 8:15-10:30 p. m. in Wright<lb/>
Auditorium.<lb/>
Tommy Mallison, Entertainment<lb/>
Committee chairman, announced that<lb/>
the dress for the Chuck Jackson con-<lb/>
cert will be: girls, casual; men, shirt<lb/>
and ties. Dress for the evening con-<lb/>
cert will be: girls, dress attire; men,<lb/>
coats and ties.<lb/>
Ticket Sale<lb/>
Tommy also announced that tick-<lb/>
ets for dates and faculty members<lb/>
will be on sale beginning tomorrow<lb/>
until the 100 tickets are sold. Tickets<lb/>
will be $3.00, and will be on sale in<lb/>
the SGA office from 9:00-10:00, and<lb/>
from 2:00-3:00.<lb/>
Attire to the dance on Saturday<lb/>
night will be party dresses for girls,<lb/>
and coats and ties for men.<lb/>
Attire to the dance on Saturday<lb/>
night will be party dresses for girls,<lb/>
and coats and ties for the men.<lb/>
Open House<lb/>
Coffee hour and open house at 9:00<lb/>
a.m. on Saturday in the Alumni-Facul-<lb/>
ty Building will begin the Homecom-<lb/>
ing Day Events. Following the an-<lb/>
nual Homecoming Parade at 10:15<lb/>
a.m a luncheon for the alumni will<lb/>
take place in th South Dining Hall.<lb/>
At 1:15 the pre-game festivities<lb/>
will begin at the college stadium, fol-<lb/>
lowed by the traditional Homecoming<lb/>
football game between the EC Pirates<lb/>
and the Fighting Christians of Elon.<lb/>
C nief Buccaneer James L. Whit-<lb/>
field of Raleigh, has announced that<lb/>
as an innovation this fall, wives and<lb/>
dates of Buccaneers will attend the<lb/>
annual dinner, which will take place<lb/>
at 7:00 p.m. in the South Dining Hall.<lb/>
Chief attractions of the dinner will<lb/>
be an informal talk by President Jenk-<lb/>
SGA Sponsors<lb/>
Lecture Series<lb/>
By JEAN PEACE<lb/>
The SGA has matched a W?tCity. Dr. Buttrick has excelled us an<lb/>
grant to the college for the staging author, editor, and lecturer through-<lb/>
of lectures on contemporary problems out the nation. So We Believe So We<lb/>
in public affairs and the social scienc-<lb/>
es. The Sperry and Hutchinson Com-<lb/>
pany selected nine colleges and uni-<lb/>
versities throughout the nation to re-<lb/>
ceive these grants under their 1960<lb/>
Lectureship Program.<lb/>
These lectures are scheduled for<lb/>
this year. The first Ls to be presented<lb/>
October 9. Two speakers are to par-<lb/>
ticipate in each lecture. A Student-<lb/>
Faculty Lectureship Committee has<lb/>
been formed to complete arrange-<lb/>
ments.<lb/>
"It is hoped that these lectures will<lb/>
?-ing the students in informal<lb/>
contact with scholarly experts. The<lb/>
general topics have been selected,<lb/>
"Education for Freedom in a Divided<lb/>
World "Liberalism and Conserva-<lb/>
tism in Domestic and Foreign Poli-<lb/>
cy and "The Creative Artist as a<lb/>
readier f the Public<lb/>
At the October 9, lecture Dr.<lb/>
George A. Buttrick will present a<lb/>
morning lecture. In the evening Dr.<lb/>
Charles Baylis, Head of the Depart-<lb/>
ment of Philosophy at Duke, will give<lb/>
conflicting opinions.<lb/>
Dr. Buttrick was Plummer Pro-<lb/>
fessor at Harvard for five years. He J<lb/>
is a member of the American Acade-<lb/>
ny of Art and Sciences. For 27 years<lb/>
he astored the Madison Avenue<lb/>
Presbyterian Church in New York<lb/>
Pray, Faith and Education ;<lb/>
ly Voyage were written by Dr. Butt-<lb/>
I'ick in the past ten years.<lb/>
Stated Dr. Batten of the E De-<lb/>
partment, "We are indeed fortunate<lb/>
to have Dr. Buttrick as a lecturer in<lb/>
our current series. The students will<lb/>
find Dr. Buttrick entertaining and in-<lb/>
formative in his discussion of educa-<lb/>
tion<lb/>
Playhouse Names Cast<lb/>
For The Glass Menagerie7<lb/>
Lucille Dew will play the blowsy, j siderahle credit for encouraging the<lb/>
Study<lb/>
PLACEMENT NOTICES<lb/>
On Monday, October 2, Represen-<lb/>
latives fj-um the U. S. General Ac-<lb/>
counting Office will hold a group<lb/>
meeting of junior and senior account-<lb/>
? uk majors in 130 Rawl at 7:00 p.m.<lb/>
On October 15, the Federal Civil<lb/>
Service Exam will be given on cam-<lb/>
pus. Last quarter juniors and all sen-<lb/>
;ors interested in taking this exam<lb/>
should pick up their application in the<lb/>
Placement Service Office (203 Ad-<lb/>
ministration Bldg.) by Monday.<lb/>
The Placement Service will publish<lb/>
a list of fall quarter teaching candi-<lb/>
dates for distribution to school super-<lb/>
intendents. Seniors who wish to be<lb/>
ncluded should complete registration<lb/>
with the Placement Service by Oc-<lb/>
tober 7.<lb/>
Sanford Appoints<lb/>
Jenkins To<lb/>
Higher Education<lb/>
Governor Terry Sanford recently<lb/>
named Dr. Leo W. Jenkins to serve<lb/>
with a 23-member commission to pre-<lb/>
pare a 15-year blueprint for State<lb/>
purported higher education institu-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
"The use of such a commission is a<lb/>
part of our determination to see that<lb/>
the taxpayers get the maximum re-<lb/>
turns in both quality and quantity of<lb/>
education for their dollar said San-<lb/>
ford.<lb/>
The need for a coordinated long-<lb/>
range plan for higher education was<lb/>
suggested by the .State Board of<lb/>
Higher Education .and the State<lb/>
Board of Education.<lb/>
Questions set down for the com-<lb/>
mission include a study on prospec-<lb/>
tive enrollments, with an optimum<lb/>
growth plan for existing institutions,<lb/>
a study of needs for faculty mem-<lb/>
bers, and what their salaries should<lb/>
be. Other questions are how higher<lb/>
education can best be financed, and<lb/>
how much fet is likely to cost over<lb/>
the next 15 years in capital improve-<lb/>
ments and operating expenses.<lb/>
Dr. Jenkins stated in a private in-<lb/>
terview that he would welcome any<lb/>
topics or suggestions from faculty<lb/>
and or students thai may be presented<lb/>
to the commission tfbr discussion.<lb/>
impoverished mother living on the<lb/>
memories of a flower-scented South-<lb/>
ern past in the East Carolina Play-<lb/>
house's presentation of "The Glass<lb/>
Menagerie" which will open a thrse-<lb/>
erformance engagement at the Mc-<lb/>
Ginnis Theatre starting next Novem-<lb/>
ber 1.<lb/>
Continuing through Nov. S this<lb/>
is the poignant drama which first<lb/>
won acclaim for its author Tennessee<lb/>
Williams, who has been described by<lb/>
the N.Y. Herald Tribune's critics as<lb/>
"the Eugene O'Neill of the present<lb/>
period on the stage<lb/>
As Amanda Wdngfield, a woman<lb/>
both amusing and pathetic, with love<lb/>
for no one but herself, Miss Dew<lb/>
will be portraying the role which is<lb/>
generally conceded to have been the<lb/>
greatest ever acted by the late Lau-<lb/>
rette Taylor who created it in N.Y.<lb/>
Laura<lb/>
Sue Taylor will be seen as Aman-<lb/>
da's diaughter, Laura, the lame and<lb/>
retiring girl who cannot bear to mix<lb/>
with people, but whose heart cries<lb/>
Over 2000 freshmen are enrolled at<lb/>
EC, yet only 504 voted in Tuesday's<lb/>
election for class officers. Tom Hart-<lb/>
ley was elected vice president; Judy<lb/>
out for affection and understanding, Whitfield, secretary; and Stephanie<lb/>
like the kind she lavishes on her col- Pascal, trasurer.<lb/>
great new talent in the American<lb/>
theatre that is Williams<lb/>
Gentleman Caller<lb/>
Completing the quartet of the<lb/>
drama's character, Tom Hull will<lb/>
portray the part of the Gentleman<lb/>
Caller, the man who comes to dinner<lb/>
and tries to get Laura over her in<lb/>
feriority complex, but disappoints<lb/>
Amanda by already being engaged to<lb/>
be married.<lb/>
"The Glass Menagerie" ran in New<lb/>
ork for 63 performances and won<lb/>
'he New York Critics' Circle Award.<lb/>
Its author received the award again<lb/>
in 1948, as well as the Pulitzer Prize,<lb/>
tor his "A Streetcar Named Desire<lb/>
Mayers To Stage<lb/>
Williams' Play<lb/>
Tlie imaginative, enchanting story<lb/>
of a dilapidated Southern mother's<lb/>
efforts to marry off a daughter as<lb/>
'labile as the glass animals she col-<lb/>
lects, has been chosen as the first<lb/>
campus presentation of the East<lb/>
Carolina Playhouse to open the sea-<lb/>
son at the McGinnis Theatre in three<lb/>
nerformaaces November 1-3. Director<lb/>
r. A. Withey has announced. Casting<lb/>
is now in progress.<lb/>
The play is "The Glass Menagerie<lb/>
by Tennessee Williams. It ran for<lb/>
over a year and a half on Broadway<lb/>
and was described by the X. Y. World<lb/>
Telegram critic as "an evening of the<lb/>
first importance<lb/>
Performances will take place in the<lb/>
McGinnis Auditorium. Curtain time<lb/>
is 8 p. m.<lb/>
The four-character play concerns<lb/>
a mother's efforts to do the best she<lb/>
can for her two children: the son<lb/>
who works in a warehouse and writes<lb/>
poetry on shoebox lids, and the crip-<lb/>
pled daughter who is too shy to con-<lb/>
tinue her studies at business school.<lb/>
Into their diny flat, overlooking<lb/>
a hack alley in St. Louis, comes th<lb/>
first Gentlemen Caller the sensitive<lb/>
girl has ever received?a big, jood-<lb/>
natured Irishman brought to dinner<lb/>
by the restless son.<lb/>
Told with the wise, good-humor,<lb/>
the curiously elusive poignancy and<lb/>
the real affection for a play's char-<lb/>
acters that distinguish Williams'<lb/>
works, "The Glass Menagerie" is the<lb/>
first of a succession of hits by this<lb/>
brilliant young writer to have been<lb/>
hailed with joy and admiration.<lb/>
Election Results<lb/>
Notice<lb/>
lection of glass animals.<lb/>
As Tom, the restless son who<lb/>
Amanda fea-s will, like his father,<lb/>
throw up his bread-winning ware-<lb/>
house job and "fall in love with long<lb/>
distance Ben Avery will be seen.<lb/>
This is the role created on Broad-<lb/>
way by Eddie Dowling, who, as co-<lb/>
producer of the play deserved con-<lb/>
A run-off election will be held be-<lb/>
tween Gill Ruderman and Robert<lb/>
Livingston for (president, Ralph Scho-<lb/>
field and Burke Stancill for male<lb/>
Penator, and between Carol Dougher-<lb/>
ty and Jean Faw for woman's senator.<lb/>
Run-offs will take place Monday,<lb/>
October 2. 12:00 noon to 4:30 p.m.<lb/>
in Wright Looby.<lb/>
A college class ring was stolen<lb/>
from the display at the ring sale<lb/>
last Thursday in the College Un-<lb/>
ion. Officials have the serial num-<lb/>
ber of the ring and intend to go<lb/>
to all lengths to find the person<lb/>
who has this ring in his possess-<lb/>
ion. The person who has the ring<lb/>
may, however, drop it in the col-<lb/>
lege post office by October 4, ad-<lb/>
dressed to the SGA, and the mat-<lb/>
ter will be forgotten.<lb/>
The Baptist Student Union<lb/>
(enter is sponsoring a "Clean<lb/>
Jean" Friday, September 29 be-<lb/>
ginning 12 noon until 5:30 p.m.<lb/>
Afterwhich, supper will be served.<lb/>
Everyone is invited.<lb/>
The Homecoming Committee completes 1961 plans. They are from left to right: Tommy Mallison. Marcelle VoreL<lb/>
Bobby Ward, Jimmy Chestnut, Carolyn Cates, Tommy Murray, Jayne Chandler. Giles Hopkins, and Merle Sum<lb/>
mers. <lb/>
<pb facs="00038717_0002"/><lb/>
PAGE TWO<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Student Chairman Needed; Faculty Play Role Of Advisor<lb/>
Entertainment Improves; Shows Variety<lb/>
Looking back over entertainment brought<lb/>
- to the campus in recent years by the SGA's<lb/>
Entertainment Committee, we see that this<lb/>
year's series promise to be one of the best<lb/>
ever proposed . . . and we venture to say it is<lb/>
the best.<lb/>
For the first time, the Entertainment<lb/>
Committee has divided the series into two<lb/>
categories, a Fine Arts Series and a Pop<lb/>
Series. Bookings for the first series have<lb/>
been made for nights during the school wreek;<lb/>
whereas, the Pop Series are tentatively on<lb/>
schedule for Friday night entertainment, in<lb/>
some cases, is scheduled for 'big' weekends.<lb/>
This will provide an extra interest and em-<lb/>
phasis on these weekends, giving the stu-<lb/>
dents an added attraction on the night be-<lb/>
fore trie planned 'big' event. For example,<lb/>
the Highwaymen will appear Friday night<lb/>
before the Homecoming activities on Satur-<lb/>
day; later this year The Nina Simone Trio<lb/>
will be on campus?Friday night before the<lb/>
major events of the IFC weekend on Satur-<lb/>
day night.<lb/>
The East Carolinian commends the mem-<lb/>
bers of the committee for its outstanding<lb/>
line-up of entertainment for this year. One<lb/>
of the members particularly, Tommy Mallison,<lb/>
who is co-chairman of the committee deserves<lb/>
commendation. Bookings and contracts for<lb/>
the Pop Series were made entirely by Tom-<lb/>
my.<lb/>
The overall appearance of the Pop Series<lb/>
(and this is unquestionably the series in which<lb/>
most students are interested) indicates ef-<lb/>
forts on the part of the committee to satisfy<lb/>
the majority of the student body  to use<lb/>
the students' money for the type of enter-<lb/>
tainment they will most enjoy and appreciate.<lb/>
Our current Entertainment Series, when<lb/>
it is compared with other college series,<lb/>
ranks at the top as one of the best. Many<lb/>
schools seem to fall into either an entire pro-<lb/>
gram of Fine Arts or an entire program of<lb/>
Pop Entertainment. Others, play one known<lb/>
artist or group during the year and have un-<lb/>
knowns making up the rest of their entertain-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
We have apparently found a combina-<lb/>
tion that excites both Fine Arts and Pop en-<lb/>
thusiasts . . . the latter, an achievement ac-<lb/>
complished for the first time this year. Why<lb/>
has this happened? One very obvious reason<lb/>
Can EC Afford To Take<lb/>
'Live Bear By The Tail'?<lb/>
Editor's note: Although we cannot agree<lb/>
with the following article in its entirety, wre<lb/>
offer it, anticipating a response to some of<lb/>
the statements it contains. The East Carolin-<lb/>
ian will welcome letters to the editor or<lb/>
columns pertaining to the subject discussed<lb/>
below.<lb/>
Reprinted from an editorial in the<lb/>
Raleigh Times<lb/>
East Carolina College, wThich has just<lb/>
been bleSvsed with membership in the Nation-<lb/>
al Collegiate Athletic Association, plans an<lb/>
expansion in the field of athletics that will<lb/>
parallel the school's growth academically and<lb/>
physically.<lb/>
That would seem to be a long way of say-<lb/>
ing that ECC hopes to go in for big-time inter-<lb/>
collegiate athletics. And that would seem to<lb/>
make it entirely appropriate to wonder out<lb/>
loud if ECC would be smart to do that.<lb/>
East Carolina has grown by leaps and<lb/>
bounds since World War II. It now has 5,500<lb/>
students, which puts it right along with Duke<lb/>
in enrollments, and not too far behind Caro-<lb/>
lina and State. Its growth has been respectable<lb/>
as well as spectacular, and its graduates have<lb/>
commanded more and more respect in the<lb/>
business and educational world.<lb/>
It has grown in the hearts of the people<lb/>
of Eastern North Carolina in a way hard to<lb/>
imagine. For a wide area, it is the educational<lb/>
institution, and has that sitatue among gradu-<lb/>
ates of other and larger institutions who live<lb/>
in that section.<lb/>
Its growth has been rapid but those in<lb/>
charge have seen to it that the growth has<lb/>
been solids, too. That growth, it should be<lb/>
noted, has been accomplished without a really<lb/>
big-time intercollegiate program, though it<lb/>
should be noted also that East Carolina base-<lb/>
ball team did win national honors.<lb/>
Butt in the relatively modest nature of its<lb/>
present intercollegiate sports program, East<lb/>
Carolina has not run into the very real head-<lb/>
aches which have plagued the heads of some<lb/>
other institutions, notably Sftate and Carolina.<lb/>
Those men have found out the hard way just<lb/>
how hard it can be to keep such a big-time<lb/>
athletic program within even relatively big<lb/>
boundaries.<lb/>
These men have found out that a really<lb/>
big-time athletic program is something like<lb/>
having a real live bear by the tail: There<lb/>
is no practical way to let go.<lb/>
It is not hard to imagine that ECC offi-<lb/>
cials would get this sort of advice from some<lb/>
leading educators now participating in really<lb/>
big-time athletics: Don't jump into that type<lb/>
program. The jumping in is easy, but the<lb/>
crawling out is hard if not impossible.<lb/>
There is one other angle to be considered.<lb/>
The news story telling of ECC's athletic am-<lb/>
bitions included this sentence: "There are<lb/>
plans for a new sitadium, field house and<lb/>
track The story didn't say where the money<lb/>
would come from, but presumbly the taxpayer<lb/>
would be asked to furnish it.<lb/>
The taxpayer is going to have his hands<lb/>
too full for sthe foreseeable future providing<lb/>
college classrooms, college dormitories, college<lb/>
laboratories, etc to be asked to provide a<lb/>
new stadium and a new field house.<lb/>
. . . for the first time the committee has been<lb/>
headed by co-chairmen, instead of a single<lb/>
chairman. This change in structure allowed<lb/>
a student ?to participate in the actual engag-<lb/>
ing and contracting procedures. This change<lb/>
gave a student equal powers to a faculty<lb/>
member. Heretofore, a faculty member 'held<lb/>
the reins' . . . and well.<lb/>
With the improvements made this year,<lb/>
we feel that we could anticipate an even<lb/>
greater and better Entertainment Series if,<lb/>
in the future, this Committee is headed by a<lb/>
student chairman only. Other SGTA Commit-<lb/>
tees are headed by students with faculty ad-<lb/>
visors. This is the role (advisor) which facul-<lb/>
ty members should play on the Entertain-<lb/>
ment Committee. Faculty members have not<lb/>
in the past truely represented the students<lb/>
interests.<lb/>
As a faculty member, particularly in the<lb/>
Music Department, an instructor too often<lb/>
is too busy with classes, choral and instru-<lb/>
mental groups, and other problems arising<lb/>
from 'problem' students to devote sufficient<lb/>
time and energy to this position.<lb/>
Drive-In College May Be<lb/>
In East Carolina Future<lb/>
By LARRY BLIZZARD<lb/>
Cars. That's all the guy saw. Honest.<lb/>
He was a visitor to our campus; "just pass-<lb/>
ing through he said. He wanted to see the<lb/>
place where I went to school, so I showed<lb/>
him everything?the dormitories, the class-<lb/>
room buildings, Wright Circle?everything.<lb/>
But all that he looked at were the auto-<lb/>
mobiles?the infinite variety of automobiles<lb/>
of every kind and description and color. I<lb/>
pointed out our newest classroom building,<lb/>
Rawl. "What kind of car is this?how much<lb/>
did it cost he asked? "Do all of these autos<lb/>
belong to students"? I looked at him?sure,<lb/>
so he was from some place where there were<lb/>
not so many cars, but, heck, what did he<lb/>
expect to see. I tried to point out the glorius<lb/>
architectural aspects of our campus, and all<lb/>
that he was interested in was where did all<lb/>
the cars come from.<lb/>
So, I thought, well, maybe the automobiles<lb/>
do constitute an important part of the college<lb/>
environment. They're colorful enough and<lb/>
with the sun shining on row upon row of the<lb/>
parked machines, obviously any person un-<lb/>
used to the sight would be instantly over-<lb/>
whelmed by it.<lb/>
What does this mean in terms of fu-<lb/>
ture trends? Well, maybe in time, the auto-<lb/>
mobile will come to replace the classroom<lb/>
building as the basic academic facility on<lb/>
the campus. What I mean is a sort of drive-<lb/>
in-school where we could simply sit in our<lb/>
cars and take in the lectures through micro-<lb/>
phones like they have in drive-in movies. The<lb/>
library could be a big bookmobile, and the<lb/>
cafeteria could be like a drive-in hamburger<lb/>
stand. Even the student bank would be of<lb/>
the drive-in variety. All the buildings would<lb/>
be torn down and parking lots built in their<lb/>
place. We could sleep, eat, study, and gen-<lb/>
erally spend our entire college careers sitting<lb/>
in our automobiles. Farfetched? Well who<lb/>
knows. Wait and see.<lb/>
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER g<lb/>
Class Meetings<lb/>
Lack Enthusiasm<lb/>
SGA Support<lb/>
By BILL KYMniw<lb/>
One uf the most pei; ;)J<lb/>
facinj? any aspirant of ? asj J<lb/>
it that of obtaining 1<lb/>
class meetings. In I<lb/>
tion returns we it 14 i<lb/>
the attendant at ' ?<lb/>
laga was even os<lb/>
With thfse tmaU . :i(j <lb/>
no approach the<lb/>
being done to r-<lb/>
blems"?<lb/>
Our Student (kv?<lb/>
tion has done very lit)<lb/>
interest at the ebu<lb/>
Hag the recent S. G ?<lb/>
"lepresetktatives of<lb/>
against a mot).<lb/>
K'atn that would<lb/>
pation at the cla<lb/>
?view of this action .<lb/>
I<lb/>
Unexplainable Sensory Phenomena<lb/>
Student Elucidates For ESP Skeptics<lb/>
i<lb/>
EC Symbolic In Time Capsule?<lb/>
Is Student Life Notable?<lb/>
By J. ALFRED WILLIS<lb/>
Suppose a project to place a time cap-<lb/>
sule in the foundations of the proposed foot-<lb/>
ball stadium came up before the SGA. (The<lb/>
bGA has had to contend with unusual pro-<lb/>
posals before, ask Bobby Ward what he has<lb/>
had to deal with on the Budget Committee.)<lb/>
What would they approve to represent East<lb/>
Carolina College as an institution of educa-<lb/>
tion and student life to archeologists of the<lb/>
future (assuming that modern concrete will<lb/>
leave ruins and a future) ?<lb/>
East Carolina College student life<lb/>
is noted for not being notable. We might<lb/>
place in (the time capsule a few of the written<lb/>
iolkways of ECC-the minutes of the last<lb/>
of RFBFT0 ?l f?Und)' a C0<lb/>
01 the &amp;&amp;BEL (it may have to come from<lb/>
?tIt?ax? $?' aJCOpy of the EAST CARO-<lb/>
LINIAN (if a dry one can be found, you<lb/>
know they are always "behind the student")<lb/>
and perhaps a warped Buccaneer. Let's put<lb/>
in a few bent Falstaff cans, a multi-colored<lb/>
disk from Wright Circle, a rabbit in place<lb/>
of the dead mascott Buc, reels of unheard<lb/>
tape from WWWS a bottle of acne n38S?<lb/>
a plastic table cloth of the Last Supper a<lb/>
pansy from in front of the Music Hall, the<lb/>
organ of Austin, in fact let's put all of Austin<lb/>
in the capsule for Austin is filled with char-<lb/>
acter (and characters) and memories. It is<lb/>
the only unique structure here.<lb/>
Let's put in a wooden bench, a pony.<lb/>
ails, the arboretum; in fact let's all of<lb/>
us go into the capsule to be concretely sealed<lb/>
up instead of abstractly entombed.<lb/>
Dear Editor:<lb/>
What is parapsychology? Many<lb/>
people ask this question and up to<lb/>
a few years ago I couldn't have an-<lb/>
swered it.<lb/>
Parapsychoigy is defined by Web-<lb/>
ster as: "A branch of ipsychology<lb/>
concerned with the investigation of<lb/>
evidence for telepathy, clairvoyance,<lb/>
thought transfer, and the like, and<lb/>
with experimentation in the field of<lb/>
extrasensory perception<lb/>
In the past year I've become very<lb/>
interested in this subject. I have done<lb/>
much reading and aim now trying to<lb/>
do a little research in the field of pa-<lb/>
parapsychology.<lb/>
Before we can understand para-<lb/>
psychology we should understand a<lb/>
few terms and their definitions. Tele-<lb/>
pathy is the reading of ones mind by<lb/>
another mind. Clairvoyance is the<lb/>
ability of the rniind to read inanimate<lb/>
material. Preoogndtion is the ability<lb/>
of the mind to foresee the fture.<lb/>
Psycholineses is the ability of the<lb/>
mind to affect inanimate material<lb/>
such as dice. These are just a few of<lb/>
the phenomena that parapsychology<lb/>
deals with. There are many more.<lb/>
Many people are skeptical about<lb/>
araipsychology but I have proof that<lb/>
it exists and am prepared to show<lb/>
it to any that care to see. Below are<lb/>
just a few thousands of such cases:<lb/>
"Woman, in Pennsylvania, dreamed<lb/>
that her four young sons had gone<lb/>
swimming, the nine-year-old in red<lb/>
t ranks. This was the only color that<lb/>
made any impression on her, the wo-<lb/>
man later recalled. As the dream<lb/>
progressed, the children were caught<lb/>
in an undertow. The mother jumped<lb/>
into the water and managed to pull<lb/>
out all but the one wearing red trunks.<lb/>
Then she awoke. Several weeks later<lb/>
her nine-year-old son was caught in<lb/>
an undertow and drowned. Although<lb/>
he owned three pairs of blue trunks,<lb/>
he was wearing a red pair of his bro-<lb/>
ther's<lb/>
Another example takes place in<lb/>
New York. "At excactly 3 A.M. one<lb/>
March 14, a young woman in New<lb/>
York awoke to hear her father in<lb/>
Italy calling her name: "Maria!<lb/>
Maria She had not seen him since<lb/>
he was a child, but remembered him<lb/>
well. Startled, she sat up in bed, and<lb/>
through the window saw her father's<lb/>
face. As she screamed "Daddy the<lb/>
vision faded away. Her family listen-<lb/>
ed skeptically when she told them her<lb/>
story. Three days later they received<lb/>
a cablegram from rtaly: The father<lb/>
had died on March 14 at 3 A.M. New<lb/>
York time<lb/>
These are only a few of many,<lb/>
many cases. Another account of this<lb/>
unexplainable phenomena happened<lb/>
to me this past summer.<lb/>
A close cousin of mine left with his<lb/>
family for (California for 6 weeks. Af-<lb/>
ter they had left, I dreamed that my<lb/>
cousin had returned that ndght. The<lb/>
next morning- I was awaken by a<lb/>
telephone call. My cousin had return-<lb/>
ed from the trip early because his<lb/>
lamily was tired of vacationing. How<lb/>
could I have possibly known? Was<lb/>
it a lucky guess, precognition, or<lb/>
some other phenomena?<lb/>
Any person having any such ex-<lb/>
perience, I'd appreciate it if he or<lb/>
she would write it down and send it<lb/>
to me in care of Jones Hall 371.<lb/>
I hope that those of you that are<lb/>
skeptical will read up on this moat<lb/>
interesting subject of Parapsychology.<lb/>
If you want a list of books on this<lb/>
lopic see me.<lb/>
Sincerly<lb/>
Alan T. Perm<lb/>
Jones Hall 371<lb/>
1-1961 by Louisa E. Rhine. McCall's<lb/>
(March '61)<lb/>
2-IBID<lb/>
What's Being Done To Improve<lb/>
Pnysieal Fitness Of US Youth?<lb/>
leair Editor:<lb/>
The physical fitness of American<lb/>
people today is at an alarmingly low<lb/>
rate. Recent tests given to young<lb/>
people in different nations show that<lb/>
fifty-seven per-cent of the European<lb/>
childred passed and only about three-<lb/>
per-cent of the American youth man-<lb/>
aged to pass. What's being done<lb/>
about improving this condition in<lb/>
which American youth appears to be<lb/>
in?<lb/>
The election of John Kennedy as<lb/>
President of the United States ap-<lb/>
pears to be the big potential for put-<lb/>
ting our youth physical fitness pro-<lb/>
gram on the right track. Kennedy has<lb/>
ehown a keen interest in developing<lb/>
the youth of today. The newspapers<lb/>
are building Kennedy u?p as a great<lb/>
touch footiball player. More than like-<lb/>
ly he was what the coaches call a<lb/>
"rinky-dink But he is doing some-<lb/>
thing about it.<lb/>
The thought that perturbs me is<lb/>
the fact that no longer do we have<lb/>
to push a plow or chop wood to gain<lb/>
muscles and strength. The modern<lb/>
world of today supplies relentless<lb/>
ways of getting the body physically<lb/>
.sound. In most cases a sound body<lb/>
will<lb/>
help develop a sound mind.<lb/>
LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS<lb/>
East Carolinian<lb/>
Published by Mi student, of East Carolina College<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
Member<lb/>
North State Conference Press Association<lb/>
Associated College Frees<lb/>
In the preceding paragraph, I stat-<lb/>
fd that in most oases a sound body<lb/>
will lead to a sound mind. Have you<lb/>
ever had a day in school when it<lb/>
seemed that you were having test<lb/>
after test and your mind was so stale<lb/>
you couldn't think? Chances are if<lb/>
before that next test you had stop-<lb/>
ped outside and taken a walk around<lb/>
the building or had done ft touch-toe<lb/>
exercise your test score would have<lb/>
been higher. The fact I want to es-<lb/>
tablish is that everybody doesn't have<lb/>
to be any kind of athlete to be physi-<lb/>
cally fit. lAthletics are a tremendous<lb/>
way of developing a person into a<lb/>
leader and giving him a competitive<lb/>
spirit. Some people just arent in-<lb/>
terested in sports. But, I can confi-<lb/>
dently say that most people are in-<lb/>
terested in themselves, and therefore<lb/>
should take pride m their physical<lb/>
condition.<lb/>
Nothing instills confidence like<lb/>
Hvmg a healthy fc<lb/>
dM who as bom under no matter<lb/>
what circurmstances, and of no matter<lb/>
what parents, the potentiality of the<lb/>
nuijma race U born again  And<lb/>
with a strong, healthy body the po-<lb/>
entaal that child is unlimited<lb/>
Sincerely,<lb/>
Whitty Bass<lb/>
s?'t-n that our "wond<lb/>
an selfishly hinder:<lb/>
of the tlaaaai<lb/>
their respective<lb/>
Akhuugh man.<lb/>
are discussed at<lb/>
meetings, it m aa<lb/>
all interested wtiahm<lb/>
meeting.<lb/>
Let it be k?ow.<lb/>
of each i a- ai,<lb/>
? n promoting class<lb/>
pation It is timt m<lb/>
six or seven gtudi<lb/>
decisions in regard ;<lb/>
dances, or the grad<lb/>
With the par-<lb/>
fulness uf every si<lb/>
able to present &amp; :<lb/>
to the S. G. A. fo<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Are EC Culture<lb/>
Enthusiasts Real<lb/>
Earnest?<lb/>
By JEAN PE K<lb/>
Do we have a f?an<lb/>
EC and its growth a<lb/>
center of Ea5err, N ? ?<lb/>
Soon we will have the<lb/>
display such enth M .<lb/>
Our Student Cover Ta<lb/>
in the $2,000 grant t I<lb/>
the staging of lee-<lb/>
contemporary problem -<lb/>
fairs and the social sciences. Oar<lb/>
lege is one of nine<lb/>
receive this grant t<lb/>
and Hutchinson Comply<lb/>
Do we have enough I ?-? to<lb/>
tend the lecture and . . - from<lb/>
student activity fees" We arc <lb/>
that our college receive a higher <lb/>
ing as a cultural ir. WM<lb/>
better way could we find I<lb/>
this recognition than : .mx<lb/>
in this student spons.an project?<lb/>
BC can grow throng I e bdrr<lb/>
ual student only. F oa as<lb/>
dividuals must be aware ?<lb/>
as well as his resp;?:<lb/>
campus so that he adds t the jrre<lb/>
ness of this institution.<lb/>
If we were asked. "Waal is edJ<lb/>
tion for freedom in a rided<lb/>
and how does it bond uld?d<lb/>
answer? Most of us  spocj<lb/>
forth high-sounding phrasal<lb/>
mean little to us pers. i The<lb/>
would stutter for a lllllilll -he (I<lb/>
quest that the question taM<lb/>
Our Student Governr ? a spec<lb/>
ing $2,000 to have : I<lb/>
questions of similar nat answer<lb/>
by an expert in the field Dr. GtQ<lb/>
Buttrick, renowned lee mi r<lb/>
hgkws leader is comi<lb/>
campus October 9. to b<lb/>
stand these values of edtam?<lb/>
We are no longer high school S&amp;<lb/>
dents who file from huini iw to thf<lb/>
auditorium for assembly led? v<lb/>
tendance is no longer mandatory f<lb/>
are now college student who <lb/>
someday be these assembly iecr. <lb/>
We should he gratefui that the o?-<lb/>
iwrtunity exists. If we do not ?tt<lb/>
for this reason, we should W<lb/>
enough curiosity to find o it J <lb/>
Student Government is spending &amp;<lb/>
r"?ney in this manner!<lb/>
Students Violate Mickey Mouse Code!<lb/>
To The Eriffe<lb/>
s<lb/>
To The Editor<lb/>
Last week-a edition of the Ea<lb/>
a carried a ?tW. dealing<lb/>
w,th the recen i??uig<lb/>
Wright Circle. The article . ?<lb/>
oi ? young couple attan K k-<lb/>
younf man "7 had hi. "<lb/>
ST ? of the "Mfc!<lb/>
? Code of Ethics" wuj<lb/>
st?a ? Whi ??<lb/>
to ad-<lb/>
here. (If you're not familiar <lb/>
the "Mickey Mouse Code of Eth<lb/>
it can be found in the student h<lb/>
ok, The Key, pages 38-49<lb/>
Where are your moralsm <lb/>
trying to destroy the Puritan aP;<lb/>
here which has been created ? <lb/>
WoU, cancel my srttacript?! I <lb/>
? to he corrupted<lb/>
Bill<lb/>
<pb facs="00038717_0003"/><lb/>
IHl<lb/>
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 28. 1961<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
TO,<lb/>
?et<lb/>
?<lb/>
i<lb/>
!<lb/>
-<lb/>
-<lb/>
-<lb/>
m jpmf f g ? " PAGE THREE<lb/>
17 Co?A gin Year As AFROTCHostesse<lb/>
Angel Flight Acquaints Campus With AFROTC<lb/>
Plans Underway For Military Ball, Service Projects<lb/>
IJ If A 111 "<lb/>
By JEAN PEACE<lb/>
.HE OFFICERS MEET . . . Newl3 elected officer of Vn?, Fligh take ?? an thei<lb/>
y, explains the duties of each officer.<lb/>
r Commander. Brenda<lb/>
Photography<lb/>
By<lb/>
SKIP WAMSLEY<lb/>
Whit roses a.nd a flag of blue<lb/>
field, white firing ami (jhe gold crest<lb/>
center once again symbolizes the EC<lb/>
Angel Plight of the Arnold Air So-<lb/>
ciety.<lb/>
Angel Fligi! ft is the coed auxiliary<lb/>
to and sponsored by the AFROTC<lb/>
here on campus. The main rpuipose of<lb/>
Angel Plight is to serve as official<lb/>
hostesses for Je AFJiOTC at dances,<lb/>
parties and socials.<lb/>
In the past the Angels have fur-<lb/>
1 ered the recognition of the AF-<lb/>
KOTC and acquainted EC with the<lb/>
.Air Force, the Air Age and Air Edu-<lb/>
cation. Angel Plight members wear<lb/>
uniforms whidh are designed and sup-<lb/>
plied by the National Headquarters<lb/>
in Pennsylvania. The organization is<lb/>
governed in a military manner by the<lb/>
National Constitution and its regu-<lb/>
lations. Officers are elected by mem-<lb/>
bers and are in command of the group.<lb/>
Possible Drill Team<lb/>
At present Angel Flight is com-<lb/>
posed of 17 girls. A drill team may<lb/>
in organized at a later date, but<lb/>
plans are not complete for this year.<lb/>
The drill team participation is on a<lb/>
voluntary basis. Miss Brenda Nun-<lb/>
nery states, "Although time consum-<lb/>
ing, it is a definite asset to the com-<lb/>
pany. Meetings are held once each<lb/>
week on Monday evenings; however,<lb/>
much outside time is devoted to ser-<lb/>
vice projects in this organization<lb/>
Lt. Colonel Norman F. Merritt, Jr.<lb/>
is in iiis third year of command of<lb/>
the AFROTC program, whicr, includes<lb/>
the Angel Flight. Angel Flight is Wi-<lb/>
der AFROTC supervision; however,<lb/>
t- e girls are under no military obliga-<lb/>
tion. There are over 100 Angel groups<lb/>
in the United States, working together<lb/>
tl trough National headquarters. Each<lb/>
year the Angels hold a national con-<lb/>
vention. The EC group tries to send at<lb/>
least 2 delegates and a sponsor.<lb/>
Our EC Angel Flight is of great<lb/>
benafil to the AFROTC. A spokes-<lb/>
man for tfhte group commented "Ang-<lb/>
el Flight luas proven to be very suc-<lb/>
cessful. They have contributed mudl<lb/>
to the favorable recognition of our<lb/>
Arnold Society<lb/>
Officers<lb/>
Officers for the coming year were<lb/>
elected last spring. Brenda Nunnery<lb/>
will serve as Commander of Angel<lb/>
Plight with Sandra Nelson, Execu-<lb/>
tive Officer; Nancy Baker, Adminis-<lb/>
trative Services Officer; Linda Mills,<lb/>
Information Services Officer; Carolyn<lb/>
Vau: I n, Historian Officer; Lana Bon-<lb/>
der, Materials Officer; and Lynn<lb/>
Slaughter, Comptroller Officer. All<lb/>
girls enter Angel Flight as 2nd Lts.<lb/>
Membership in the Angels is on a<lb/>
(Highly selective lasis. Each girl must<lb/>
have a sponsor in the Arnold Society<lb/>
who is in good military standing. Pros-<lb/>
pective members are appointed on a<lb/>
point system which includes appear-<lb/>
ance 4, personality 4, interest 4. poise<lb/>
4, and time 4. Girls may not receive<lb/>
a total less tfran 15 points. An Angel<lb/>
must receive the full 4 points con-<lb/>
cerning time and appearance. An<lb/>
orientation period for the new in-<lb/>
ductees is conducted before initiation.<lb/>
With the coining of a new term,<lb/>
Angel Flig'it has "great plans The<lb/>
Military Ball is in tl.e planning stages,<lb/>
but with the "cooperation and the<lb/>
enthusiasm" of the Angels, tfce dance<lb/>
will be a "huge success Through ' V,X1" A wrrKiS BREAK . . . After business m,<lb/>
out e year the girls of Angel Flight Plighl members enjo, a cup of coffee and informal chatter<lb/>
v. ill serve punch and grace the par- "dl waiter<lb/>
ties otf the Arnold Air Society with<lb/>
tile charm of IX Coeds.<lb/>
KUOMMMOt <lb/>
VNGELS TAKE A COFFEE BREAK<lb/>
gs, Aogvl<lb/>
?it. PROBLEM;<lb/>
If only Mr. Kennedy were here to help us solve this one<lb/>
Lets Co SKATING Tonight<lb/>
?V all the Fun and Excitement of Skating and Dancing<lb/>
WONDERLAND. This areas Newest and Most Modern<lb/>
tional ' tenter.<lb/>
SKATING Week Nights 7:00-10:30<lb/>
DANCIN G<lb/>
TEEN AGE DANCE?Wed. and Fri 7:30-11:00<lb/>
ADULT COUPLES DANCE?Sat 9:00-1:00 a m<lb/>
WONDERLAND<lb/>
BY NIGHT<lb/>
IN KINSTON<lb/>
Located 3 miles West on Highway 70 at the Bypass.<lb/>
AND CLASS BEGINS . . . Saunders Grady, Arnold Air Society Commander, instructs EC Angels in air science.<lb/>
je?<lb/>
r with<lb/>
"?:iks ?<lb/>
hand"<lb/>
re '?"<lb/>
tniosp-<lb/>
m <lb/>
! I ?"<lb/>
DELICIOUS FOOD<lb/>
SERVED 24 HOURS<lb/>
Air Conditioned<lb/>
Carolina Grill<lb/>
Corner W. 9th &amp; Dickinson<lb/>
FORWARD MARCH  The Angels fall in line for drill and inspection.<lb/>
AND A GOOD TIME WAS HAD BY ALL . . . Scrapbook pictures bring<lb/>
bark memories of good times as well as hard work.<lb/>
<pb facs="00038717_0004"/><lb/>
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 28,<lb/>
mi<lb/>
PAGE FOUR<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
- u<lb/>
Winners To Receive Graduate Aids<lb/>
Holt Announces Deadline For<lb/>
Danforth Fellowship Applications<lb/>
Applications for Danforth Gradua-<lb/>
te Fellowships worth up to $12,000<lb/>
are now being received, Robert L.<lb/>
Holt, Dean, announced today.<lb/>
The fellowships, offered by the<lb/>
Danforth Foundation of St. Louis,<lb/>
Missouri, are open to male college<lb/>
.seniors or recent graduates prepar-<lb/>
ing for a career of teaching, counsel-<lb/>
ing, or administrative work at the<lb/>
college level. Applicants may be plan-<lb/>
ning to major in any recognized field<lb/>
at the American graduate school of<lb/>
their choice, but should not have al-<lb/>
ready undertaken graduate work.<lb/>
Approximately 100 fellowships will<lb/>
be awarded to candidates from ac-<lb/>
credited colleges and universities in<lb/>
the United States. Nominees will be<lb/>
judged on intellectual promise and<lb/>
personality, integrity, genuine inter-<lb/>
est in religion, and potential for ef-<lb/>
fective college teaching.<lb/>
Winners will be eligible for up to<lb/>
four years of financial assistance,<lb/>
with an annual maximum of $1,500<lb/>
for single men and $2,000 (as well<lb/>
as $500 per child" for married men,<lb/>
plus tuition and fees.) Student with-<lb/>
out financial needs also are invited<lb/>
to apply.<lb/>
Educational Conference<lb/>
In addition to the annual stipend,<lb/>
winners will be guests of the Founda-<lb/>
tion at an annual educational confer-<lb/>
FBLA Welcomes<lb/>
New Members<lb/>
The first meeting of the Phi Beta<lb/>
Lambda Chapter of Future Business<lb/>
Leaders of America was held Sept.<lb/>
19. Mary Helen Mumford, president,<lb/>
welcomed the new members to the<lb/>
club and introduced the other officers<lb/>
committee chairmen and advisors.<lb/>
Other officers serving with Mary<lb/>
Helen are: Bill Hudson, vice presi-<lb/>
dent; Nellie Gwaltney Taylor, re-<lb/>
cording secretary; Sandra Cobb, cor-<lb/>
responding secretary; Gene Saun-<lb/>
ders, treasurer; Diana McPherson, re-<lb/>
porter; Mildred Barnhart, historian;<lb/>
William Thompson, parliamentarian;<lb/>
Janice Guyton. chairman of the so-<lb/>
cial committee; and Chuck Kling-<lb/>
man, co-chairman of the Valentine<lb/>
Dance committee with Bill Hudson;<lb/>
Mrs. Carol Ann Hart, Mr. Alton<lb/>
Finch, and Mrs. Norman Cameron,<lb/>
advisors.<lb/>
A membership drive will be con-<lb/>
ducted October 2, 3, and 4.<lb/>
The chapter elected Alice Starr to<lb/>
be its Homecoming sponsor and<lb/>
Gloria Uzzell, its Buccaneer sponsor.<lb/>
ence held on the shores of Lake Mich-<lb/>
igan. Leading scholars are brought to<lb/>
the conference for lectures, seminars<lb/>
and personal contact with the Fel-<lb/>
lows.<lb/>
Danforth Graduate Fellowships are<lb/>
unique in that they may be held for<lb/>
life, with certain benefits after com-<lb/>
pletion of graduate work, such as fi-<lb/>
nancial assistance to attend educa-<lb/>
tional conferences and stipends to pur-<lb/>
chase books and periodicals during<lb/>
the first three years of teaching.<lb/>
Other Scholarships<lb/>
Students may hold a Danforth Fel-<lb/>
lowship concurrently with other ap-<lb/>
pointments, such as Rhodes, Woodruw<lb/>
Wilson, Fulbright, and National<lb/>
Science Foundation. Winners will be<lb/>
Danforth Fellows without stipend<lb/>
until these other awards lapse.<lb/>
Further information concerning the<lb/>
program may be obtained in Room<lb/>
iOG, Administration Building from<lb/>
Dr. Robert L. Holt who may nomin-<lb/>
ate up to three candidates. Nomina-<lb/>
tions must be submitted to the Foun-<lb/>
dation by November 1.<lb/>
The Danforth Foundation, one of<lb/>
the nation's 10 largest educational<lb/>
Foundations, wias founded in 1927 by<lb/>
the late William H. Danforth, St.<lb/>
Louis businessman and philanthrop-<lb/>
ist. The Foundation's primary aim is<lb/>
to strengthen and enrich higher edu-<lb/>
cation in America.<lb/>
Peace Corps Begins 3rd Roimd<lb/>
Of Examinations October 3<lb/>
EVERYONE<lb/>
IS WEARING<lb/>
BASS<lb/>
WEEJUNS<lb/>
Ladies'<lb/>
Men's<lb/>
$11.95<lb/>
$15.95<lb/>
?5?M:<lb/>
.3kf<lb/>
? ? ? ? c- ? ? ? ? ? <lb/>
? Shirts<lb/>
? Dresses<lb/>
? Crew Neck<lb/>
Cardigans<lb/>
HARBURT SKIRTS<lb/>
Pleated - Flare - Slim<lb/>
$10.95 up<lb/>
LONDON FOG<lb/>
All Purpose Coats<lb/>
THE DUCHESS<lb/>
For Her<lb/>
THE LONDON<lb/>
For Him<lb/>
$32.50<lb/>
GOLF JACKET<lb/>
For Him<lb/>
$15.95<lb/>
22 E. FIFTH STREET<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C.<lb/>
Student Charge Accounts Invited.<lb/>
Any American who wants to serve<lb/>
in the Peace Corps will have another<lb/>
opportunity to qualify by taking ex-<lb/>
aminations on October 7.<lb/>
The third round of Peace Corps<lb/>
examinations will be held at that<lb/>
time in testing centers throughout<lb/>
the country.<lb/>
The examinations will begin at 8:30<lb/>
A. M. and will last for six hours,<lb/>
with an additional hour out for lunch.<lb/>
Each person will be given his choice<lb/>
between two types of examinations.<lb/>
One examination is designed for<lb/>
men and women who would like to be<lb/>
considered for positions as secondary-<lb/>
school or college teachers. To take one<lb/>
of these tests, you need a bachelor's<lb/>
degree but you do not need to be an<lb/>
accredited teacher.<lb/>
The other examination is for every-<lb/>
one else who wants to serve in the<lb/>
Peace Corps. There is no rigid passing<lb/>
grade for this test. Results are con-<lb/>
sidered along with other elements as<lb/>
background, special skills, and char-<lb/>
acter references.<lb/>
For the October tests, the Peace<lb/>
Corps hopes to attract a large num-<lb/>
ber of Americans in the agricultural<lb/>
and industrial fields.<lb/>
"We are receiving an increasing<lb/>
number of requests for such skills<lb/>
from prospective host countries ac-<lb/>
Senior Exhibition In<lb/>
Art Design Ends Today<lb/>
Barbara Tucker, senior, exhibited<lb/>
in the Kate Lewis Gallery, Rawl<lb/>
Building, varied examples of her work<lb/>
as a student artist. The show ended<lb/>
today.<lb/>
Mrs. Tucker began her study of<lb/>
art at Woman's College in Greens-<lb/>
boro, where she specialized in fashion<lb/>
design and art education. For the<lb/>
past year and a half she has attended<lb/>
East Carolina and is scheduled for<lb/>
graduation in February.<lb/>
In the recent exhibition. Mrs. Tuck-<lb/>
er's interest in design courses offered<lb/>
here was indicated in two three-di-<lb/>
mensional designs in wood. A still-life<lb/>
oil painting, figure drawings; prints,<lb/>
including a wood cut, a wood engrav-<lb/>
ing, etchings, and a monoprint; a<lb/>
ceramic vase, examples of lettering,<lb/>
and other works were included in the<lb/>
exhibition.<lb/>
cording to Dr. Nicholas Hobbs, Di-<lb/>
rector of Selection for the Peace<lb/>
Corps. "Wre will have to turn down<lb/>
these requests of we are unable to<lb/>
meet their needs<lb/>
The testing centers in this area<lb/>
are as follows. Fayetteville, code<lb/>
45-13, Main Post Office; Goldsboro,<lb/>
code 45-15, Main Post Office; and Ra-<lb/>
leigh, code 45-16, Main Post Office.<lb/>
Dr. Jones Accepts<lb/>
Appointment To<lb/>
TEPS Council<lb/>
Dr. Douglas R. Jones, director of<lb/>
the department of ediication, has ac-<lb/>
cepted an appointment as a memiber<lb/>
of the State Advisory Council on<lb/>
Teacher Education and Professional<lb/>
Standards.<lb/>
Appointed by Dr. Charles F. Car-<lb/>
roll, state superintendent of public<lb/>
instruction, Dr. Jones will serve on<lb/>
the Council during 1961-1968.<lb/>
As a member of the group, Dr.<lb/>
Jones will work with the In-Service<lb/>
Education Committee.<lb/>
A native of Farmville and an EC<lb/>
r.lumnus, Dr. Jones joined the faculty<lb/>
in 1957 as a professor in the depart-<lb/>
ment of education and last May be-<lb/>
raime director of the department. He<lb/>
replaced Dr. iEd J. Carter, who as-<lb/>
sumed the position of director of<lb/>
tn-aduate studies.<lb/>
Tau Sigma Elects<lb/>
William C. Jackson<lb/>
New President<lb/>
William C. Jackson, Jr has been<lb/>
elected president of Tau Sigma,<lb/>
honorary education fraternity for the<lb/>
1961-1962 school year.<lb/>
Requirements for membership in<lb/>
Tau Sigma include the maintenance<lb/>
of at least a "B" average and the<lb/>
pursuit of a Bachelor of Science De-<lb/>
gree.<lb/>
Other officers elected to serve with<lb/>
Mr. Jackson are as follows:<lb/>
Lynda Iewis, vice (president; Annie<lb/>
Marie Riddick, corresponding secre -<lb/>
tary; Rebecca Singleton, secretary;<lb/>
Myna (!ni Pittman, treasurer; Elea-<lb/>
nor Poole, parliamentarian;<lb/>
Gladys Cay, social chairman; Mari-<lb/>
lyn Coburn, chairman; and M. .Susan<lb/>
l.oftis, historian.<lb/>
IRC Announces<lb/>
Beginning Of Fall<lb/>
Writing Contest<lb/>
The Literary Committee of the In-<lb/>
ter-Religious Council announces a<lb/>
writing contest to be conducted be-<lb/>
ginning today, September 28 and end-<lb/>
ing Saturday, October 28 at twelve<lb/>
o'clock noon.<lb/>
Entries will be accepted from three<lb/>
fields: poems, short stories, and a<lb/>
combination of essays and one-act<lb/>
plays. Selections do not have to be<lb/>
of religious significence but of liter-<lb/>
?ny value, relative to an understand-<lb/>
ing of faith and religion.<lb/>
A panel of judges will select the<lb/>
winners, who will be awarded cash<lb/>
prizes. Winning selections will ap-<lb/>
pear in the Rebel, tentatively. En-<lb/>
tries should be taken to the Baptist<lb/>
Student Center at 404 East 8th Street<lb/>
or mailed to Carl Yorks, Chairman<lb/>
of the Literary Commvibtee.<lb/>
Students browse<lb/>
thrh exhibit of new teaching method, a, las, Fnd.ys NCBA QH.vent.on.<lb/>
College Receives Recommedation For<lb/>
Interest In International Understand ins<lb/>
WESLEY FOUNDATION WEEKLY<lb/>
SCHEDULE<lb/>
At the Student Center:<lb/>
Sunday<lb/>
9:00 a.m.?Buns and Coffee?in<lb/>
Lounge<lb/>
Hi 10 a.m.?Sunday School Class in<lb/>
Assembly Room<lb/>
730 p.in?'Evening Worship<lb/>
Tuesday<lb/>
5:15 p.m.??Fellowship Supper?in<lb/>
Lounge (65c)<lb/>
6:15-7:15 p.m.?"Wesley Conversa-<lb/>
tions" (Leaders and subjects will<lb/>
be announced)<lb/>
Wednesday<lb/>
7:00 a.m.?Holy Communion in The<lb/>
Chapel<lb/>
7:30 a.m.?Breakfast in the Lounge<lb/>
(Over in time for 8:00 o'clock<lb/>
classes)<lb/>
Lib Rogers Named<lb/>
Happa Alpha Rose<lb/>
Lib Rojrers has been selected as<lb/>
Kappa Alpha Rose by brobhers of the<lb/>
amma Rho Chapter. With a mem-<lb/>
bership of thirty-nine men in the<lb/>
fraternity, the Kappa Alpha brothers<lb/>
serenaded Lib last Friday night at<lb/>
her home.<lb/>
She was chosen not only for beauty<lb/>
but also for personality and comnet-<lb/>
ent leadership. She will represent the<lb/>
chapter in all caimpus beauty contests<lb/>
and serve as official hostess for the<lb/>
group.<lb/>
Now a junior, Lib is specializing in<lb/>
art.<lb/>
176 Student Teaching<lb/>
EC's student teaching program for<lb/>
the fall quarter includes 176 seniors<lb/>
who are conducting classes in more<lb/>
than twenty-eight public schools in<lb/>
Eastern North Carolina.<lb/>
Sixty-six are doing work in the<lb/>
primary and grammar grades, 92 in<lb/>
high schools, and eighteen are teach-<lb/>
ing either art or music at all grade<lb/>
levels.<lb/>
East Carolina College has received<lb/>
a letter of commendation for the con-<lb/>
tribution made in furthering inter-<lb/>
national understanding during the<lb/>
academic year from the southeastern<lb/>
office of World University Service.<lb/>
A special note of congratulation was<lb/>
extended to Robert C. Christesen,<lb/>
Chairman, World University Service<lb/>
for his role in this endeavor through<lb/>
the excellent administration in con-<lb/>
ducting a successful campaign.<lb/>
As part of the program $200.00<lb/>
from the annual World University<lb/>
Service campaign was contributed to<lb/>
student international self-help and<lb/>
mutual assistance projects sponsored<lb/>
by WUS. This gift, coupled with con-<lb/>
tributions from the campuses around<lb/>
the world, makes possible health fa-<lb/>
cilities, housing accomodations, sup-<lb/>
plementary foods and educational<lb/>
equipment for needy students in the<lb/>
Middle East, Africa, Southeast Asia<lb/>
?and the Far East.<lb/>
Projects include establishment of a<lb/>
health center at Chung Chi College in<lb/>
Hong Kong; a cooperative student<lb/>
dormitory in Madras, India; X-ray<lb/>
apparatus for Nagpur University in<lb/>
Bulletin Publishes<lb/>
Science Paper Of<lb/>
James R. Wheatley<lb/>
James R. Wheatley, Jr junior bi-<lb/>
dogy major, is represented by an ab-<lb/>
stract of an original scientific paper<lb/>
in a recent issue of the "Phychologi-<lb/>
cal News Bulletin official organ of<lb/>
the American Phychological Society.<lb/>
The paper was presented last<lb/>
spring before the Student Section of<lb/>
the North Carolina Collegiate Acade-<lb/>
my of Science. A request for an ab-<lb/>
stract by the bulletin resulted in pub-<lb/>
lication of Mr. Wheatley's research<lb/>
work entitled, "A Study of Population<lb/>
Growth m Carteria sp. Cultures aa<lb/>
Influenced by Nitzschia closterium<lb/>
In addition to his work in the de-<lb/>
lr.rtment of science here, Mr. Wheat-<lb/>
ley has had three and a half years of<lb/>
experience at the U.S. Radiohiology<lb/>
Laboratory at Beaufort, N .C, as a<lb/>
member of the staff and in summer<lb/>
work since 1954.<lb/>
He is vice president of the student<lb/>
Science Club and treasurer of the<lb/>
local chapter of (the national honor-<lb/>
ary science fraternity Chi Beta Phi.<lb/>
In preparing his scientific paper,<lb/>
Mr. Wheatley had as advisors Dr.<lb/>
Mary C. Helms of the college faculty<lb/>
and Dr. T. R. Rice of the U.S. Radio-<lb/>
biology Laboratory at Beaufort.<lb/>
India; medical instruments and sup- in of academic lift ? :<lb/>
plies for health service in Indonesia;<lb/>
equipment for a student printing<lb/>
house in Israel; textbooks and aca-<lb/>
demic journals for Korean universi-<lb/>
ties; and materials for a library in<lb/>
Basirtoland, Africa.<lb/>
WUS represents an international<lb/>
al assistance to can<lb/>
a camp 18-to-campUb- <lb/>
student basi. The ;<lb/>
organized in some 4 i<lb/>
world and has been in <lb/>
the days immediate<lb/>
War I.<lb/>
"Not only is this a dull party, but<lb/>
I've run out of CHESTERFIELDS<lb/>
21 GREAT TOBACCOS MAKE 20 WONDERFUL SMOKES!<lb/>
AGED MILD, BLENDED MILD-NOT FILTERED MILD-THEY SATSSFY<lb/>
Didtu Sigma Tau's Hear<lb/>
Withey's Lecture On Burma<lb/>
Omicron Theta Chapter of Sigma<lb/>
Tau Delta, professional English fra-<lb/>
ternity, is now planning its 1961-<lb/>
1902 program.<lb/>
Projects for the year include a<lb/>
membership drive for new members,<lb/>
sponsoring a booth at the annual<lb/>
College Union Mardi Gras. and assist-<lb/>
ing the staff of The Rebel, cam-<lb/>
pus literary magazine. Officers elect-<lb/>
ed in the spring have assumed their<lb/>
ciuties and have begun preparations<lb/>
for a full and active year.<lb/>
The meeting of October 11 will be<lb/>
i'pvn to all English majors and min-<lb/>
i-rs interested in joining the fratern-<lb/>
ity. Dr. Joseph Withey, English pro-<lb/>
feseor ;tnd director of the East Car<lb/>
i-lina Playliouse will give a lecture<lb/>
on his experiences during a year of<lb/>
it-search in Burma in 1960-1961.<lb/>
After Dr. Withey's lecture, pros-<lb/>
peetie members will have an oppor-<lb/>
tunity to look at the fraternity's<lb/>
crapbook; constitution; and the<lb/>
??Rectangle notional fraternity<lb/>
magazine; and to b?<lb/>
familiar with the fra<lb/>
Slyvia Dawkins, wa<lb/>
trainer. Dr. George Cool<lb/>
of English, and Joe I'earct<lb/>
c?i as installation eh<lb/>
Starrest, Frames<lb/>
Spruill, Ronnie QoofM<lb/>
.i:un were appoints I<lb/>
I anting of new pie<lb/>
The aaeetiae; wat<lb/>
leoture on England<lb/>
( ook.<lb/>
.<lb/>
SNEA Discusses Plans<lb/>
For Local TV Show<lb/>
The Student National Education<lb/>
Association held its first meeting of<lb/>
the school year Sept. 20.<lb/>
Assuming duties of 1961-1962 offic-<lb/>
ers of the Robert H. Wright chapter<lb/>
are Faye Brantley, president; Betty<lb/>
Collier, vice president; Beth Ann<lb/>
Rogers, secretary and Lilliam Currie,<lb/>
treasurer.<lb/>
In addition, the local S.NJE.A. has<lb/>
as a local member Wayne Forbes,<lb/>
serving as state president of the Fu-<lb/>
ture Tachers Division of the North<lb/>
Carolina Education Association.<lb/>
Serving in this capacity also allowed<lb/>
Forbes to attend the national con-<lb/>
ference held during the summer<lb/>
months at Pennsylvania State.<lb/>
Pr. anting a program on the local<lb/>
television circuit in observance of<lb/>
National Education Week, attending<lb/>
the state convention in Raleigh this<lb/>
November, and sponsoring a needy<lb/>
family at Christmas are a few of the<lb/>
numerous Pr of the local chapter<lb/>
Music Dept. Names<lb/>
College Singers;<lb/>
Plans Programing<lb/>
The ten student-<lb/>
have been chosen :t-<lb/>
College Singers this<lb/>
announced by the<lb/>
music. They were M le I<lb/>
their ability as musi <lb/>
'alent as vocalist<lb/>
during the 1961-1962<lb/>
The College Si<lb/>
number of<lb/>
school year. One of '<lb/>
musical events in which '<lb/>
is an annual Christ<lb/>
carola from man<lb/>
Dan E. Vornholt of the<lb/>
of music is director ,<lb/>
Olive G. Herring and :<lb/>
ray are piano aeeaaapani<lb/>
The ten member-<lb/>
Singers are: sopran-<lb/>
S irley Morse, ami I<lb/>
altos. Elizabeth A<lb/>
Bivins. and R. Nadeer. i<lb/>
J. Burman Parker and Jerr N P<lb/>
cott; bases, Jimmie A . ? &amp;<lb/>
Eugene Moore.<lb/>
DIAMONDS<lb/>
CHEAPER THAN WHOLESALE<lb/>
ter we eliminate the profItfSUtte toK"<lb/>
ring manufacturer, and wholesaler mam?nd broker,<lb/>
of any? ??3 X&amp; description<lb/>
make this ring up for at laV? . We will<lb/>
SvecM creM Urn, ? be arranged <lb/>
LAUTARES JEWELERS<lb/>
h<lb/>
is<lb/>
Tl<lb/>
St<lb/>
R?<lb/>
A<lb/>
mi<lb/>
je<lb/>
Tri Sigma's Announce<lb/>
New Sisters, Pledges<lb/>
The Gamma Beta ? "<lb/>
:iia Sigma Sigma, so: " <lb/>
nounced three new stude-  inic<lb/>
ae Maters and five u ? r-class?<lb/>
chosen to become member? ipon-3<lb/>
tilling requirements at " &amp;<lb/>
the school year.<lb/>
Those initiated as sisiers in <lb/>
sorority at St. James Meth?s<lb/>
Church are Ann Reichwine. Jj<lb/>
and Laura Gartman.<lb/>
Pledges slated for membership ?<lb/>
Polly Buntina Elizabeth Glover. J<lb/>
ny Lynn Thompson. Linda Then<lb/>
and Martha Rutchins.<lb/>
55m<lb/>
Oi<lb/>
E.<lb/>
Y.<lb/>
B<lb/>
M<lb/>
Ju<lb/>
Sd<lb/>
Soj<lb/>
In1<lb/>
Ej<lb/>
Chi<lb/>
Wc<lb/>
M<lb/>
Co!<lb/>
R<lb/>
O<lb/>
Ei<lb/>
M(<lb/>
Pi<lb/>
Oi<lb/>
Ph<lb/>
s.<lb/>
N.<lb/>
Tei<lb/>
lib?<lb/>
Mei<lb/>
W<lb/>
ECj<lb/>
Chj<lb/>
?i<lb/>
? i<lb/>
? i<lb/>
cl<lb/>
ii<lb/>
Starts Friday<lb/>
at the<lb/>
STATE Theatre<lb/>
Marines Lets G?<lb/>
<pb facs="00038717_0005"/><lb/>
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1961<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
PAGE FIVB<lb/>
???<lb/>
Howard Replaces Director Of Housing;<lb/>
Buck To Assume Accountant Position<lb/>
William N. Howard of Greenville<lb/>
bias been appointed Director of Hous-<lb/>
png at East Carolina.<lb/>
He will replace Mr. Melvin V.<lb/>
Buck who is to become an accountant<lb/>
, the business office as of October 1.<lb/>
Mr. Buck lias served in the office<lb/>
f Director of Housing since 1967.<lb/>
His administration has been during<lb/>
e period when ECC has experi-<lb/>
snced its greatest growth, and the<lb/>
loffice has accordingly expanded its<lb/>
activities. Newer and more stringent<lb/>
tic regulations have been put in<lb/>
fcffect. Last year the office printed<lb/>
first traffic miformation booklet,<lb/>
ilso a phamphlet, "Dormitory In-<lb/>
formation for Men" was published.<lb/>
A program of public relations has<lb/>
receouli been emphasised by Mr.<lb/>
feuck to improve and maintain high<lb/>
Standards for those who must live<lb/>
 campus.<lb/>
Mr. Buck, who is a Pitt County na-<lb/>
By JOHN BEHR<lb/>
tive, received his B.S. degree from<lb/>
State College and later his M.A. in<lb/>
business at East Carolina. For the<lb/>
past two years he has done educa-<lb/>
tional work for the U.S. Air Force<lb/>
Reserve. An ex-Air Force officer, he<lb/>
now holds a war mobilization rank<lb/>
of captain.<lb/>
Mr. Howard who is a graduate of<lb/>
the business department at East Car-<lb/>
olina has served for the past several<lb/>
years as sales representative for tihe<lb/>
Raleigh firm of Gray and Creech,<lb/>
Inc. As a Student here, he was chair-<lb/>
man of the Awards Committee of the<lb/>
S. O. A. and also a member of the<lb/>
honorary business fraternity, Delta<lb/>
Sigmi Pi. A native of Raleigh, he is<lb/>
married to the former Mary Anne<lb/>
Dallas of Leaksville.<lb/>
Army Counselor To Speak On<lb/>
Career Fields For Women<lb/>
U Elects Six<lb/>
elegates; Choose<lb/>
ueen Candidates<lb/>
On Friday, October 6, Miss Mannie<lb/>
Evans, Army Specialist Coups Co-<lb/>
unselor, will be on camipus frian 9:00-<lb/>
2:00 pm in Room 201 Adminstration<lb/>
Building with the carrier fields of<lb/>
physical therapy, dietetics, and oc-<lb/>
cupational therapy.<lb/>
Health and Physical Education,<lb/>
Dietetic, Biology, and Arts majors<lb/>
are encouraged to see Miss Evans.<lb/>
College students who complete ac-<lb/>
ademic requirements successfully will<lb/>
be commissioned as second lieutenants<lb/>
after graduation and receive the pay<lb/>
and allowances of an Army officer<lb/>
while they obtain their professional<lb/>
training.<lb/>
Applicants must be unmarried, 21-<lb/>
29 years-old, and have high scholastic<lb/>
qualifications. Physical standards as<lb/>
established by the Department of the<lb/>
Army must be met.<lb/>
nerally<lb/>
1 pledge<lb/>
? ssor<lb/>
t elect-<lb/>
Jo km<lb/>
Betty<lb/>
by <lb/>
:eorge'<lb/>
e College Union recently held a<lb/>
l meeting to elect committee chair-<lb/>
i for the coming year.<lb/>
McCullen was elected as the<lb/>
1 v andidate for Buccaneer Queen<lb/>
and Hostess for the Union dur-<lb/>
Homecoming festivities.<lb/>
delegates from the EC Col-<lb/>
( Union will attend the Region IV<lb/>
ence of the Association of Col-<lb/>
ge Unions at the University of Vir-<lb/>
x October 12-14. The delegation<lb/>
Jimmy Taylor, Glenn Boyd,<lb/>
Shearin, Monty Mills, Elaine<lb/>
on, and Ross Thomas.<lb/>
annual tea for foreign students<lb/>
eduled for Sunday, October 22.<lb/>
lother project of the CU will be the<lb/>
is Directory, which is expected<lb/>
ready for sale by the end of the<lb/>
! rent quarter.<lb/>
I aniuee chairmen were elected.<lb/>
are as follows: Monty Mills,<lb/>
ial Chairman; Jimmy Cannon,<lb/>
ord and Dance Chairman; Eliza-<lb/>
b Thorton, Beatrice Barrett, Fine<lb/>
s; Dab- Jordan, Publicity Chair-<lb/>
n; Bowie Martin, Games Chair-<lb/>
feu Kllie Speckman, Special Pro-<lb/>
Bet Chairman.<lb/>
lev<lb/>
Phi Omicron Elects<lb/>
Members; Plans<lb/>
Year's Projects<lb/>
Phi Omicron, honorary Home Eco-<lb/>
nomics fraternity, voted by secret<lb/>
allot to select new members of the<lb/>
fraternity at their September meet-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
Members of the fraternity are chos-<lb/>
en on the basis of scholastic standing,<lb/>
leadership abilty and high personal<lb/>
standards. Rebecca Parker, chairman<lb/>
of the membership committee, present-<lb/>
ed the committee's report on the girls<lb/>
who had met the above qualifications<lb/>
for membership.<lb/>
As one of their money making pro-<lb/>
jects, Phi Onicron decided to sell<lb/>
place-mats, coasters, and luncheon<lb/>
sets at the Greenville Arts Center.<lb/>
Their two big projects for the year<lb/>
will be to help a needy family and<lb/>
to give gifts to the mentally ill<lb/>
Fraternity Elects<lb/>
Officers; Tripp<lb/>
Chosen As Prexy<lb/>
Chi Beta Phi, Honorary Science<lb/>
I raterndty, recently elected its slate<lb/>
of officers for the 1961-62 school<lb/>
year. New officers of the fraternity<lb/>
are: Barbara Manning Tripp, presi-<lb/>
dent; Roy Flanagen, vice-president;<lb/>
Betty Derrick, secretary; Jim Wheat-<lb/>
ly, treasurrer; and Peggy Oulverhouse,<lb/>
program chairman.<lb/>
Other members of the fraternity<lb/>
are: Betty Dane, Fred Johns, James<lb/>
Massey, Phyllis Dudley. Also Jerry<lb/>
Norton, Bab Imanianiura, Sandra<lb/>
Thompson, and Mary Ann Worthing-<lb/>
ton.<lb/>
Fraternity Begins<lb/>
Fall Plans; Hew<lb/>
Members Elected<lb/>
The Beta Kappa Chapter of Pi<lb/>
Omega Pi, business fraternity, has<lb/>
begun its program for the 1961-1962<lb/>
term with nine current members.<lb/>
New members, chosen because of their<lb/>
suiterior scholastic records in the<lb/>
School of Business, will be elected<lb/>
this month and will be announced in<lb/>
the near future.<lb/>
Because of the outstanding pro-<lb/>
gram of activities for business stu-<lb/>
dents with high academic standing,<lb/>
the college chapter has three times<lb/>
been chosen as the most outstanding<lb/>
chapter in the national organization.<lb/>
lAimong annual projects of the Beta<lb/>
Chapter are acting as one of the<lb/>
sponsors of tihe annual Typing Con-<lb/>
test staged by the School of Busi-<lb/>
ness for high school students in the<lb/>
northeastern counties of the state;<lb/>
publication of a yearbook, "Beta<lb/>
Kappa News and awarding each<lb/>
spring ttie Thomas Clay Williams<lb/>
Memorial Scholarship to the col-<lb/>
lege senior with the highest academic<lb/>
vecord in business education.<lb/>
Jean Flake serves as president of<lb/>
the fraternity. Other officers are Syl-<lb/>
via Harris, vice president; Karen<lb/>
Brown, secretary; Jim Taylor, treas-<lb/>
urer; and Jean Warren, and Glennis<lb/>
Edlwards, co-historians.<lb/>
Other members of the organization<lb/>
include Linda Thompson, Jimmy<lb/>
Chesnutt, and Mrs. Nellie G. Taylor.<lb/>
Serving as advisors of the business<lb/>
fraternity are Dr. iAwdrey V. Demp-<lb/>
sey and Frances Daniels, members<lb/>
of the School of Business.<lb/>
Krausnick Succumbs To Heart Attack<lb/>
Wh<lb/>
On Pacific Scientific Expedition<lb/>
News has been received here of the. of the group. Mrs. Krausnick served<lb/>
recent death in Hbnolulu of Dr.<lb/>
Walter S. Krausnick, who retired in<lb/>
1957 as a faculty member of the col-<lb/>
lege. During several years of<lb/>
service at East Carolina, he first<lb/>
taught physics in the department<lb/>
of science and then joined the staff<lb/>
of the depairtment of mathematics.<lb/>
After his retirement Dr. Kraus-<lb/>
nick and his wife made their home<lb/>
in Hawaii and traveled widely in<lb/>
Europe and the Orient.<lb/>
Dr. Krausnick, aged 72, died of<lb/>
a heart attack while on am expedition<lb/>
with the Pacific Scientific Congress,<lb/>
of which he was a member. Funeral<lb/>
services and burial were held in,<lb/>
Honolulu.<lb/>
A native of St. Louis, Dr. Krausnick<lb/>
received his undergraduate training<lb/>
at the University of Missouri. His<lb/>
degrees inrluded the master of science<lb/>
from Texas A. and M the master<lb/>
of arts from the University of<lb/>
Texas, and the doctor of philosophy<lb/>
from the University of Michigan.<lb/>
While in Greenville, both Dr. and<lb/>
Mrs. Krausnick participated in civic<lb/>
and religious affairs on the campus<lb/>
and in the city of Greenville. Dr.<lb/>
Krausnick participated in programs<lb/>
of the Faculty Lecture Club of the<lb/>
College. He was a member of the<lb/>
Unitarian Fellowship in Greenville<lb/>
and acted as a leader in activities<lb/>
as president of the Greenville Branch<lb/>
of the American Association of Uni-<lb/>
versity Women and held membership<lb/>
in other community organizations.<lb/>
Mrs. Krausnick is now in Hawaii<lb/>
w ith her daughter, who livss at 1909<lb/>
Kakela Street, Honolulu.<lb/>
lames<lb/>
S? ?Continued From SGA Report Page 1<lb/>
ling<lb/>
ten of<lb/>
i eat<lb/>
recital ?<lb/>
departme!<lb/>
the group-<lb/>
u-bara Mur-<lb/>
Ists.<lb/>
the CollS?<lb/>
Barhaffl<lb/>
HotwB<lb/>
mkt Carols<lb/>
jdiey;tenoS<lb/>
rry <lb/>
Adcock ?<lb/>
Lounce<lb/>
ledges<lb/>
Lapter of<lb/>
ritv, <lb/>
ients inrt<lb/>
ipper-clag<lb/>
?rs liP?n<lb/>
Pledges (jyi<lb/>
roanizations<lb/>
E.V. r.<lb/>
Y. M. C. A.<lb/>
Buccaneer<lb/>
Bn's and Woman's Jud.<lb/>
Y. W. C. A.<lb/>
Hnir Class<lb/>
Se? Class<lb/>
Sophomore Class<lb/>
Inter-Religious Council<lb/>
Carolinian<lb/>
leerleaders<lb/>
linen's Kec. Assoc.<lb/>
?n's Intrumurals<lb/>
?lege Choir<lb/>
Jbel<lb/>
Hera Theater<lb/>
Bftertainmen<lb/>
vie Series<lb/>
xiuctiona<lb/>
;hestra<lb/>
ivhouse<lb/>
IG. A.<lb/>
E. A.<lb/>
mis Club<lb/>
ary Club<lb/>
k's Glee Club<lb/>
W W S<lb/>
kj Brass<lb/>
Cfcapel Choir<lb/>
1960-1961<lb/>
Appropriation<lb/>
$ 1,200.00<lb/>
450.00<lb/>
26.000.00<lb/>
248.00<lb/>
650.00<lb/>
2,700.00<lb/>
1,675.00<lb/>
1961-1962 1961-1962<lb/>
Request Appropriation<lb/>
1,375.00<lb/>
13,911.00<lb/>
605.00<lb/>
1,650.00<lb/>
1,833.05<lb/>
1,345.00<lb/>
4,220.00<lb/>
1,200.00<lb/>
17,500<lb/>
3,350.00<lb/>
800.00<lb/>
3,350.00<lb/>
16,112.80<lb/>
150.00<lb/>
232.40<lb/>
50.00<lb/>
$ 1,700.00<lb/>
1,210.36<lb/>
32,216.53<lb/>
260.00<lb/>
845.00<lb/>
3,100.00<lb/>
1,710.00<lb/>
200.00<lb/>
1,319.00<lb/>
14,540.00<lb/>
760.00<lb/>
2,133.75<lb/>
2.125.00<lb/>
1,270.00<lb/>
5,247.00<lb/>
1,450.00<lb/>
24,605.00<lb/>
1,750.00<lb/>
3,250.00<lb/>
2,660.00<lb/>
5,285.00<lb/>
15,351.00<lb/>
183.92<lb/>
232.40<lb/>
75.00<lb/>
1,400.00<lb/>
796.00<lb/>
125.00<lb/>
450.00<lb/>
$ 1,000.00<lb/>
No Action<lb/>
31,781.53<lb/>
143.00<lb/>
No Action<lb/>
2,525.00<lb/>
1,210.00<lb/>
No Action<lb/>
96 .00<lb/>
13,860.00<lb/>
455.00<lb/>
1,148.75<lb/>
2,025.00<lb/>
750.00<lb/>
4,374.00<lb/>
1,100.00<lb/>
24,605.00<lb/>
1,750.00<lb/>
3,000.00<lb/>
535.00<lb/>
3,000.00<lb/>
25,351.00<lb/>
No Action<lb/>
No Action<lb/>
No Action<lb/>
No Action<lb/>
No Action<lb/>
No Action<lb/>
No Action<lb/>
Chi Omega Pledges<lb/>
Twelve During<lb/>
Informal Rush<lb/>
The Rho Zeta Chapter of Chi Om-<lb/>
;a Sorority pledged twelve new<lb/>
members, Monday, September 25,<lb/>
after a series of informal rush parties.<lb/>
The members of the Epsilon Pledge<lb/>
Class are as follows: Jayne Bennett,<lb/>
Judy Brisson, Sylvia Oarmady, Caro-<lb/>
lyn Gates, Ann Greenwell, Jo Nell<lb/>
Kerley; Julia McLarty, Linda Minton,<lb/>
Nancy Roberts, Barbara Ryan, Cece-<lb/>
lia Strickland, and Cindy Sturdivant.<lb/>
Now serving as officers of Rho<lb/>
Zeta Chapter of Chi Omega are Betty<lb/>
Lane, president; Barbara Ann Ellis<lb/>
vice president, Beth Harris, secretary;<lb/>
Jewel Callihan, treasurer, and Jayne<lb/>
Chandler, pledge trainer.<lb/>
Medusa was once heard to rave:<lb/>
"A new hair-do is just what I crave,<lb/>
With my Swingline I'll tack<lb/>
All these snakes front to back,<lb/>
And invent the first permanent wave<lb/>
Are You Anybody? At All!<lb/>
list in<lb/>
kes d<lb/>
hne,<lb/>
Jane<lb/>
<lb/>
embersbiP<lb/>
bh Glover, ?"<lb/>
mda ?l<lb/>
ieatr<lb/>
!t$Go<lb/>
'ooLa.e have difficulty remembering jour name? OmBlwmmMm<lb/>
Cca?io?all, look at ,ou in a pu?led way. M ?? shea wondenn where<lb/>
he's seen you before? <lb/>
Discouraging, isn't it? But things can be better ???? $<lb/>
ack your bag full of laundry and tippy-toe out ?? <lb/>
.aundromat at Colonial Heights. On East Tenth Street ??L I<lb/>
Hothes are somewhat dreamily sloshing themselves dreauul clean<lb/>
the Meetinghouse self-service washers, chew ?<lb/>
Cmerson's "Self Reliance Take the money you ve saved by using<lb/>
' automatic washers and buy yourself a Nest ?<lb/>
?rformance weekly. As the saved money "waTe ?J?<lb/>
chickens. A lot of chickens. Trake the chickens for ?"?<lb/>
ror a horse. Enter the horse in a Derby. Win firs pme Buy your-<lb/>
lf an Alfa-Romeo convertible, an eight-and-a-half inch ivoryc<lb/>
tte holder, and special ground dark glasses. Laugh a lot. Joe II bj<lb/>
Urwhelmed with friends offering you pi?. JLTZSL<lb/>
tumble your name constantly, and mother will welcome you home. ?<lb/>
But don't get too big for your bonnet Don't forget where you<lb/>
lot your start-at Colonial Heights Laundromat. Where yo.saved<lb/>
1 3 . ? - ? - niirht iust before you go bidie-bye,<lb/>
o much money, remember. Every mgnt, jmn "? . " . f, ,<lb/>
Bpeat to yourself, "Only Westinghouse tubs are self-cleaning. CoUm<lb/>
an Heights Laundromat, good night<lb/>
SWINGLINE<lb/>
STAPLER<lb/>
no bigger than<lb/>
a pack of gum!<lb/>
Unconditionally Guaranteed<lb/>
? Md? in America!<lb/>
 Tot 00 rot His always available!<lb/>
i Buy It at your atationery,<lb/>
variety or bookstore dealer!<lb/>
LM? MmmI Ctty 1. Nmt Verfc<lb/>
WtttftlV URtltT MMIirMTWKM<lb/>
On Campos<lb/>
xwSfrufoan<lb/>
(Author of "I Was a Teenroae Dwarf "Th Many<lb/>
Loves of Dobie Gilli etc.)<lb/>
THE GIRL I LEFT BEHIND ME<lb/>
It happens every day. A young man goes off to college, leaving<lb/>
bis home town sweetheart with vows of eternal love, and then<lb/>
he finds that he has outgrown her. What, in such cases, is the<lb/>
honorable thing to do?<lb/>
Well sir, you can do what Rock Sigafoos did.<lb/>
When Rock left Cut and Shoot, Pa he said to his sweetheart,<lb/>
a simple country lass named Teas d' Urbevilles, "My dear,<lb/>
though I am far away in college, I will love you always. I wiU<lb/>
never look at another girl. If I do, may my eyeballs parch and<lb/>
wither, may my viscera writhe like adders, may the moths get<lb/>
my new tweed jacket<lb/>
Then he clutched Tess to his bosom and planted a final kiss<lb/>
upon her fragrant young skull and went away, meaning with all<lb/>
bis heart to be faithful.<lb/>
But on the very first day of college he met a coed named<lb/>
Fata Morgana, a girl of such sophistication, such poiee, such<lb/>
uw-at're as Rock had never beheld. She spoke knowingly of<lb/>
Franz Kafka, she hummed Mosart, she smoked Marlboros.<lb/>
v1ptmMm wfa&amp;mxlt.um<lb/>
Now Rock didn't know Franz Kafka from Pancho Villa, or<lb/>
Mozart from James K. Polk, but Marlboros he knew full welL<lb/>
He knew that anyone who smoked Marlboros was modern and<lb/>
advanced and as studded with brains as a ham with clove.<lb/>
Good sense tells you that you can't beat Marlboro's exclusive<lb/>
selectrate filter, and you never could beat Marlboro's fine flavor.<lb/>
This Rock knew.<lb/>
So all day he followed Fata around campus and listened to her<lb/>
talk about Franz Kafka, and then in the evening he went back<lb/>
to the dormitory and found this letter from his home town<lb/>
iweetheart Tess:<lb/>
Dear Rock,<lb/>
U kids had a keen time yesterday. We went down to th$<lb/>
pond and caught some frogs. I caught the most of anybody.<lb/>
Then we hitched rides on trucks and did lots of nutsy stuff<lb/>
like that. Well, I must close now because I got to whtoHUh<lb/>
the fence. . .<lb/>
Your friend,<lb/>
Ten<lb/>
PA.?l can do my Hula Hoop SflOO times.<lb/>
Well iir, Rock thought about Tess and then he thought<lb/>
about Fata and then'a great sadness fell upon him. Suddenly<lb/>
he knew he had outgrown young, innocent Ten; his heart now<lb/>
belonged to smart, sophisticated Fata. <lb/>
Rock, being above all things honorable, returned forthwitn<lb/>
to his home town and walked up to Tees and looked her in the<lb/>
eye and said manlily, "I do not love you any more. I love a<lb/>
girl named Fata Morgana. You can hit me in the ?tomach witn<lb/>
all your might if you like ??'?<lb/>
"That'i okay, hey aaid Tees amiably. "I donst love yoa<lb/>
neither. I found a new boy<lb/>
"What is his name?" aiked Rock.<lb/>
"Fran Kafka said Teat.<lb/>
"A splendid fellow eaid Rook and shook Tees s hand, and<lb/>
they have remained good frienda to this day. In fact, Rock and<lb/>
Fata often double-date with Fran and Tess and have heaps of<lb/>
fun. Franz can do the Hula Hoop 6,000 timee. wmmmmm<lb/>
? ? ?<lb/>
Marlboro, in ? Wn-etoe ?? "?<lb/>
tox, i, sold and njo&amp; 1 U ? &amp;m. And htM-<lb/>
Alfred Philip Morris Commander, made of tupm ? natural<lb/>
tobaccos, m enw mmmmmm<lb/>
GENTLE<lb/>
FASHION<lb/>
When she wants to feel fresh and cracker-crisp,<lb/>
then she wants an expertly designed shirt that<lb/>
says good taste. Trim checks enhance cotton<lb/>
lovingly cut to be worn with spirit. The<lb/>
rounded Bermuda collar softly flatters her facet.<lb/>
Assured is the word for this shirt<lb/>
? 1961-Conl ShlitMakM<lb/>
The Gant Story<lb/>
We believe that Gent thirts have certain well bred look<lb/>
that distinguishes them from all others. Careful tailoring<lb/>
sod Adherence to ? strict tradition are qualities indigenous<lb/>
? Gaat. The emphasis here is on meticulous detail ia a<lb/>
heritage of conservatism.<lb/>
Do voo like a really neat, welt fitting collar? Softly flared<lb/>
cellar construction is gently RIGHT. Do you want to hang<lb/>
roar shirt op? A trim hanger loop sees to that Room to<lb/>
breathe? Oversize body construction is the answer. There's<lb/>
a fall length box pleat back for trimness, too. Precise stitch,<lb/>
lag lets the easy barrel cuffs roll up at mid-point.<lb/>
The Gaat shirt has been designed to serve yon through a<lb/>
fifetiae el correct dressing. There is painstaking workman-<lb/>
ship ia every fine Gaat shirtit comes from the expert<lb/>
?rait of New England's finest shirtmakert. The craft ex-<lb/>
plains why me careful details of these Gant shirts have<lb/>
bean many times imitated but never duplicated.<lb/>
etffaoonwi<lb/>
GANT OF NEW HAVE<lb/>
Our Button Down<lb/>
Oxforf<lb/>
Most few.<lb/>
for the traditional in dwas demands the finort<lb/>
to tailoring, always in the most wwli-lwed<lb/>
o?fttian&amp;<lb/>
We Cordially Invite You to Re&amp;isier Far A<lb/>
COLLEGE HALL SUIT<lb/>
To Be Given Away Homecoming Weekend<lb/>
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 6th<lb/>
NO PURCHASE NECESSARY?REGISTER BVERY-<lb/>
NU ruKunAO riuE YOU COME IN<lb/>
? . ? ?????:???? . ? ?? :<lb/>
<pb facs="00038717_0006"/><lb/>
PAGE SIX<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER $<lb/>
MEN'S INTRAMURAL TOUCH FOOTBALL SCHEDULE<lb/>
NEW DORM LEAGUE<lb/>
1?1st Floor West<lb/>
2?1st Floor East<lb/>
3-2nd Floor West<lb/>
4?2nd Floor East<lb/>
Teams<lb/>
8 vs. 2<lb/>
1 vs. 5<lb/>
5 vs. 7<lb/>
8 vs 3<lb/>
6 vs. 1<lb/>
2 vs. 4<lb/>
5 vs. 8<lb/>
6 vs. 3<lb/>
2 vs. 7<lb/>
4 vs. 1<lb/>
' vs. 3<lb/>
2 vs. 5<lb/>
4 vs 7<lb/>
6 vs. 8<lb/>
1 vs. 2<lb/>
3 vs. 4<lb/>
6 vs.<lb/>
7 vs.<lb/>
2 vs.<lb/>
4 vs.<lb/>
6 vs<lb/>
8 vs.<lb/>
3 vs.<lb/>
2 vs.<lb/>
4 vs. 8<lb/>
7 vs. 1<lb/>
4 vs. 6<lb/>
7 vs. 3<lb/>
8 vs.<lb/>
1 vs.<lb/>
5 vs.<lb/>
8 vs.<lb/>
6 vs.<lb/>
2 vs.<lb/>
5 vs. 8<lb/>
6 vs. 3<lb/>
2 vs. 7<lb/>
4 vs. 1<lb/>
1 vs. 3<lb/>
2 vs. 5<lb/>
4 vs. 7<lb/>
6 vs. 8<lb/>
6<lb/>
8<lb/>
3<lb/>
5<lb/>
7<lb/>
1<lb/>
5<lb/>
6<lb/>
2<lb/>
5<lb/>
7<lb/>
3<lb/>
1<lb/>
4<lb/>
Date<lb/>
Monday. October 2<lb/>
Tuesday, October 3<lb/>
Wednesday, October 4<lb/>
Thursday, October 5<lb/>
Monday, October 9<lb/>
Tuesday, October 10<lb/>
Wednesday, October 11<lb/>
Thursday, October 12<lb/>
Monday, October 16<lb/>
Tuesday, October 17<lb/>
Wednesday, October 18<lb/>
Thursday, October 19<lb/>
Monday, October 23<lb/>
Tuesday, October 24<lb/>
Wednesday. October 25<lb/>
Thursday, October 26<lb/>
Monday, October 30<lb/>
Tuesday, October 31<lb/>
Wednesday. November 1<lb/>
Thursday. November 2<lb/>
Monday, November 6<lb/>
5?3rd Floor West<lb/>
6?3rd Floor East<lb/>
7?4th Floor West<lb/>
8?4th Floor East<lb/>
Field<lb/>
No. 1<lb/>
No. 1<lb/>
No. 1<lb/>
No. 1<lb/>
No. 1<lb/>
No. 1<lb/>
No. 1<lb/>
No. 1<lb/>
No. 1<lb/>
No. 1<lb/>
No. 1<lb/>
No. 1<lb/>
No. 1<lb/>
No. 1<lb/>
No. 1<lb/>
No. li<lb/>
No. 1<lb/>
No. 1<lb/>
No 1<lb/>
No. 1<lb/>
No. 1<lb/>
Time<lb/>
4:00 pjn.<lb/>
6:00 p.m.<lb/>
4:00 pan.<lb/>
5:00 p.m.<lb/>
4:00 pjn.<lb/>
5:00 p.m.<lb/>
4:00 pjn.<lb/>
6:00 p.m.<lb/>
4:00 p.m.<lb/>
5:00 p.m.<lb/>
4:00 p.m.<lb/>
5:00 p.m.<lb/>
4:00 p.m.<lb/>
5:00 pjn.<lb/>
4:00 p.m.<lb/>
5:00 p.rru<lb/>
4:00 p.m.<lb/>
6:00 pjn.<lb/>
4:00 p.m.<lb/>
6:00 p.m.<lb/>
4:00 p.m.<lb/>
5:00 p.m.<lb/>
4:00 p.m.<lb/>
5:00 p.m.<lb/>
4:00 p.m.<lb/>
6:00 p.m.<lb/>
4:00 pjn.<lb/>
5:00 p.m.<lb/>
4:00 pjn.<lb/>
5:00 p.m.<lb/>
4:00 p.m.<lb/>
5:00 p.m.<lb/>
4:00 p.m.<lb/>
6:00 p.m.<lb/>
4:00 p.m.<lb/>
5:00 p.m.<lb/>
4:00 p.m.<lb/>
6:00 p.m.<lb/>
4:00 p.m.<lb/>
5:00 p.m.<lb/>
4:00 pjn.<lb/>
EC Visits Catawba After Guilford Win<lb/>
MEN'S INTRAMURAL TOUCH FOOTBALL SCHEDULE<lb/>
INDEPENDENT LEAGUE<lb/>
Teams<lb/>
6 vs. 2<lb/>
5 vs. 4<lb/>
1 vs. 2<lb/>
3 vs. 4<lb/>
6 vs.<lb/>
1 vs.<lb/>
2 vs.<lb/>
3 vs.<lb/>
1 vs.<lb/>
4 vs.<lb/>
2 vs.<lb/>
1 vs.<lb/>
5 vs.<lb/>
4 vs.<lb/>
1 vs.<lb/>
6 vs.<lb/>
5 vs.<lb/>
1 vs.<lb/>
1?Bye<lb/>
2-3FL EW Jones<lb/>
3?Stocklemnen<lb/>
Date<lb/>
5<lb/>
4<lb/>
5<lb/>
6<lb/>
5<lb/>
6<lb/>
3<lb/>
6<lb/>
3<lb/>
2<lb/>
3<lb/>
2<lb/>
4<lb/>
2<lb/>
3 vs. 4<lb/>
6 vs.<lb/>
1 vs.<lb/>
5:00 p.m.<lb/>
NOTE: Rained-out games or playoffs will be played November 7. 8, and 9.<lb/>
MEN'S INTRAMURAL TOUCH FOOTBALL SCHEDULE<lb/>
FRATERNITY LEAGUE<lb/>
Teams<lb/>
8 vs. 2<lb/>
1 vs. 6<lb/>
5 vs. 7<lb/>
8 vs. 3<lb/>
6 vs. 1<lb/>
2 vs. 4<lb/>
5 vs. 8<lb/>
6 vs. 3<lb/>
2 vs. 7<lb/>
4 vs. 1<lb/>
1 vs. 3<lb/>
2 vS. 5<lb/>
4 vs 7<lb/>
6 vs. 8<lb/>
1 vs. 2<lb/>
3 vs. 4<lb/>
5 vs. 6<lb/>
7 vs. 8<lb/>
2 vs. 3<lb/>
4 vs.5<lb/>
6 vs 7<lb/>
8 vs. 1<lb/>
3 vs. 5<lb/>
2 vs. 6<lb/>
4 vs. 8<lb/>
7 vs. 1<lb/>
4 vs. 6<lb/>
7 vs. 3<lb/>
8 vs. 2<lb/>
1 vs. 5<lb/>
5 vs. 7<lb/>
8 vs. 3<lb/>
6 vs. 1<lb/>
2 vs.<lb/>
5 vs.<lb/>
6 vs.<lb/>
2 vs<lb/>
4 vs.<lb/>
1 vs.<lb/>
2 vs.<lb/>
4 vs.<lb/>
1?Alpha Phi Omega<lb/>
2?Sigma Phi Epsilon<lb/>
3?Pi Kappa Phi<lb/>
4?Pi Kappa Alpha<lb/>
Date<lb/>
Monday, October 2<lb/>
Tuesday, October 3<lb/>
Wednesday, October 4<lb/>
Thursday, October 5<lb/>
Monday, October 9<lb/>
Tuesday, October 10<lb/>
Wednesday, October 11<lb/>
Thursday, October 12<lb/>
Monday, October 16<lb/>
5?Sigma Nu<lb/>
6?Lambda Chi<lb/>
7?Theta Chi<lb/>
8?Kappa Alpha<lb/>
Field<lb/>
No. 2<lb/>
No. 2<lb/>
No. 2<lb/>
No. 2<lb/>
3 vs.<lb/>
1 vs.<lb/>
4 vs.<lb/>
2 vs.<lb/>
1 vs.<lb/>
5 vs.<lb/>
4 vs.<lb/>
1 vs. 3<lb/>
6 vs. 2<lb/>
5 vs. 4<lb/>
1 vs. 2<lb/>
3 vs. 4<lb/>
Monday, October 2<lb/>
Tuesday, October 3<lb/>
Wednesday, October 4<lb/>
Thursday, October 5<lb/>
Monday, October 9<lb/>
Tuesday, October 10<lb/>
Wednesday, October 11<lb/>
Thursday. October 12<lb/>
Monday, October 16<lb/>
Tuesday. October 17<lb/>
Wednesday, October 18<lb/>
Thursday, October 19<lb/>
Monday, October 23<lb/>
Tuesday, October 24<lb/>
Wednesday. October 25<lb/>
Thursday. October 26<lb/>
Monday, October 30<lb/>
Tuesday, October 31<lb/>
4?Country Gents<lb/>
5?Unknowns<lb/>
6?3FL WW Jones<lb/>
Field<lb/>
No. 3<lb/>
No. 3<lb/>
No. 8<lb/>
No. 3<lb/>
No. 3<lb/>
No. 3<lb/>
No. 3<lb/>
No. 3<lb/>
No.<lb/>
No.<lb/>
No. 3<lb/>
No. 3<lb/>
No. 8<lb/>
No. 3<lb/>
No. 3<lb/>
No. 3<lb/>
No. 3<lb/>
No. 3<lb/>
6 vs. 5<lb/>
NOTE: Rained-out games or playoffs will be played November<lb/>
Time<lb/>
4:00 pjn.<lb/>
5:00 pjn.<lb/>
4:00 p.m.<lb/>
6:00 pjn.<lb/>
4:00 p.m.<lb/>
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The Women's Recreation Associa-<lb/>
tion has organized for the 1961-1962<lb/>
term and begun a series of intramu-<lb/>
ral activities of interest to members,<lb/>
President Ann Craft has announced.<lb/>
The WRA is open to all women<lb/>
students at the college. Its purpose<lb/>
is to encourage the spirit of play, to<lb/>
WRA Volleyball<lb/>
W. R. A. volleyball intramurals<lb/>
will be starting soon. The intra-<lb/>
murals will take place on Tuesday<lb/>
and Thursday afternoons. Two<lb/>
representatives will be elected<lb/>
in each dormitory to organize<lb/>
teams and to inform interested<lb/>
girls of the day and time games<lb/>
are to be played.<lb/>
Convertibles Wanted<lb/>
Anyone owning a convertible,<lb/>
late model preferably, who would<lb/>
like to drive it in the Home-<lb/>
coming parade contact Merle<lb/>
Summers at the SGA office.<lb/>
work for the promotion of physical<lb/>
activities among students; and to de-<lb/>
velop health, physical efficiency, and<lb/>
citizenship among members.<lb/>
The recreational program sponsor-<lb/>
ed by the organization includes areh-<lb/>
ry, badminton, softball, volley ball,<lb/>
tennis, and basketball. The WRA<lb/>
also arranges a series of social<lb/>
events, such as picnics and wiener<lb/>
roasts, during the school year.<lb/>
Officers, in addition to Miss Craft<lb/>
are Imogene Turner, vice president;<lb/>
Wayne, treasurer; Clarice Galloway,<lb/>
chairman of the Awards Committee;<lb/>
Janice Tripp, dhairman of the Pub-<lb/>
licity Coananittee; and Frances Wil-<lb/>
son, reporter.<lb/>
Coach Jack Boone's EC grid Pi-<lb/>
rates edged a stubborn Guilford<lb/>
eleven 17-15 last Saturday afternoon<lb/>
at Armfield- Stadium in Guilford.<lb/>
Some estimated 2000 fans watebed<lb/>
the Bucs come from behind three<lb/>
times before being victorious. The<lb/>
winning touchdown for the visitors<lb/>
was scored by Bill Strickland, a 190<lb/>
pound Junior from Portsmouth, Va.<lb/>
The score came with less than four<lb/>
minutes remaining and the home<lb/>
team having a 15-10 advantage.<lb/>
The other Buc touchdown came in<lb/>
the second quarter on a 37 yard pass<lb/>
from Dan Rouse to Tom Michel. The<lb/>
(touchdown by the latter being his<lb/>
fourth of the young campaign. Bob<lb/>
Mill draw's 18-yard field goal and 2<lb/>
extra points completer the scoring for<lb/>
East Carolina. Clayton Piland, Bob<lb/>
Bumgardner, and Chuck Gordon stood<lb/>
out on defense for the winners.<lb/>
Pirate mentor Jack Boone was<lb/>
pleased that his ball club came<lb/>
through with the win. However, he<lb/>
was quoted as saying. "I'm not pleas-<lb/>
ed with the showing our team made.<lb/>
The team was guilty of numerous er-<lb/>
rors and they must be corrected be-<lb/>
fore we meet Caitawba next Saturday<lb/>
night in Salisbury<lb/>
The Buc coach went on to say, "We<lb/>
know Oatawba has a strong team and<lb/>
:f we are going to stay in the ball<lb/>
gaane against them we are going to<lb/>
have to improve. EC appears in<lb/>
pretty good physical shape for the<lb/>
arc light encounter as Boone's forces<lb/>
received no serious injuries from the<lb/>
Guilford contest.<lb/>
The EC coach stated that, his team<lb/>
missed a couple of "home run" plays<lb/>
that could have been touchdowns and<lb/>
would have broken the game wide<lb/>
open for EC. "Overall, our boys never<lb/>
gave-up and I am proud of them<lb/>
EC will face a Catawba team from<lb/>
which Coach Boone anticipates noth-<lb/>
ing but "trouble The Indians pos-<lb/>
sess several fine backs with experi-<lb/>
ence, as well as a strong forward<lb/>
wall. The Catawba field general is<lb/>
?Tim Rose, a Junior Letterman, who<lb/>
had an outstanding Freshman year in<lb/>
?959, but was out with injuries last<lb/>
season.<lb/>
Other outstanding backs the<lb/>
Pirates are expected to face Satur-<lb/>
day night in Salisbury are Don<lb/>
C rouse, an excellent kicker and run-<lb/>
ner, from Littlestown, Pennsylvania;<lb/>
Jean Worthington, a Senior All-<lb/>
Conference letterman. Worthington<lb/>
led the conference in rushing last sea-<lb/>
son with 703 yards. Also expecting to<lb/>
give the Bucs trouble will be converted<lb/>
fullback Don Elkifts. The 210 pounder<lb/>
was an all-conference end in 1960.<lb/>
SPORTS<lb/>
REVIEW<lb/>
By RICHARD BOYD<lb/>
Hmr The Student Body Can Help Th I'<lb/>
East Carolina's 1061 grid Pirates definitely i.UVe ?<lb/>
makings of a fine football team. The potentiality of the tea<lb/>
may not be reached until the latter stages of the ? v m<lb/>
factor in the projrress of the team will be influenced ;v<lb/>
only by the work of Coach Jack Boone and his ca .<lb/>
everyone connected with the football squad.<lb/>
When speaking of everyone connected with (<lb/>
means the entire East Carolina student body. Tti<lb/>
that the majority of the people fail to realize. W i<lb/>
are on the field playing their hearts out to win,<lb/>
thusiasm in the stadium can be seen by the exl<lb/>
which the EC fans give their team.<lb/>
It seems that this has been a traditional thing<lb/>
time for us, the students, to wake-up and realize thai<lb/>
lina's athletic fortunes in the future will rely a<lb/>
the support of the students.<lb/>
Since EC is a prospective Southern Conf<lb/>
which is a "giant" step in the athletic program,<lb/>
the fans can not also take a gigantic step towar<lb/>
this school? A god showing on the gridiron this<lb/>
tremely important toward the prestige of the colh<lb/>
What can the student body do to help the tean<lb/>
hard question to answer. More and better pep ralli s<lb/>
encouraged, the cheers at the games mean more to 1<lb/>
than the average fan realizes: congratulations she<lb/>
to the players on their efforts alter each conto<lb/>
These are just a few major items thai can help 1<lb/>
morale. Most high school games have more cheei<lb/>
so-called noise in EC's opener against Indiana State.<lb/>
Saturday night the Hues battle Catawba in S<lb/>
who can possible make the trip, should go and ci<lb/>
on to victory. Last week a hand full of loyal EC fa<lb/>
the EC vs. Guilford game. But even a few fans<lb/>
heard from, help the cause.<lb/>
On October 7, the fighting Bucs" return<lb/>
then- Homecoming affair with Elon. Then- will 11<lb/>
grads returning to watch Coach Jack Boone's forces<lb/>
The student body should make an organized i<lb/>
ai out in supporting the team with a strong show<lb/>
tion that this ball club -wants" from the stud,<lb/>
student body behind the team one hundred per<lb/>
should have been all along) it can make<lb/>
ence in their play.<lb/>
a:<lb/>
a great de<lb/>
realize that w<lb/>
The sooner EC students<lb/>
ihe team, the part that can play a tremendous<lb/>
then the chances for a winning football campaign<lb/>
Hut until we get an organized effort for a better : si<lb/>
hna spirit" then we will continue to play the old tra<lb/>
of let the players do all the work because they are<lb/>
dividuals involved in our winning chances<lb/>
My Neighbors<lb/>
NOTE: Rain-out games or playoffs will be played November 7, 8 and 9<lb/>
HHHHHMHHHMM?<lb/>
W<lb/>
0<lb/>
?'<lb/>
Cor. Fifth and Cotanche<lb/>
"Dedicated To . . .<lb/>
A Young Man's Taste"<lb/>
kkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkklck<lb/>
WHAT<lb/>
WAS<lb/>
THE<lb/>
TRUTH<lb/>
ABOUT<lb/>
ADA?<lb/>
I? M-G-M<lb/>
.Suoif Dun<lb/>
HflmnwD ? Martin<lb/>
Welcome ECC Students<lb/>
YOU ARE CORDIALLY INVITED TO VISIT<lb/>
The "M AP" Party House and<lb/>
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Sauce, Gobs of Cheese, all perfectly mixed<lb/>
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I Personally Extend a Cordial Welcome<lb/>
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"A NICE PLACE FOR NICE PEOPLE"<lb/>
Five Points - Greenville, N. C. - Bill Rriffin, Opr. and Mgr.<lb/>
Hs whafe up front tint counts<lb/>
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<pb facs="00038717_0007"/>
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